"Yes! Because... you know... If I'm planning on cheating on my wife, the first thing I'll do is post my feelings and perverted thoughts online, in a public sociak network where EVERYONE CAN READ ABOUT IT! No shit, Sherlock. Best logic ever!"
- Julio H. Morimoto
"LOL! All reviews are insane! == I attempted to download a summary to my computer and my monitor EXPLODED. Normally, I would complain to the author and demand a refund, but the mere opportunity to witness this miracle of written word is payment for my loss ten times over. =="
- Julio H. Morimoto
"Where are those Anonymous guys? They cracked down on Scientology in the past, and since then I've never heard of those wackos anymore. They should start a movement against RIAA and associated friends before they get out of control (which, in my opinion, they already are). This is hurting society big time."
- Julio H. Morimoto
"Wow, very intersting! People tend to believe it's true. But your fridge is just a reflection of your eating habits. Despite common saying, you are NOT what you eat. Your eating habits reflect the type of person you are --- In other words, you don't eat too much because you're fat... Fact is... you're fat because you eat too much. The phrase "you are what you eat" reverts this logical reasoning. People feel more acceptable to change their eating habits, reinforced by a catch phrase that sounds "cool" and "smart"."
- Julio H. Morimoto
"TPB's purpose is not to host copyrighted content against the law. But their actions over the years made if very clear that they weren't really interested in cooperating against this sort of activity."
- Julio H. Morimoto
"I have to agree with you on this. TPB had a notorious habit of mocking the entertainment industry. At some point, they used to post the letters sent by companies asking their tracked content to be removed from their database, and they explicitly responded with sarcasm, negligence and abusive language. This clearly showed they were not interested in cooperating against piracy. Google has clear rules following DMCA. If any company claims royalties on any content indexed or hosted by Google, the content is immediately removed until the dispute is settled."
- Julio H. Morimoto
"I completely agree. Social networks based on trust have been around for a number of years now. No one complains to the fact we have to verify the identity of a person on Facebook/MySpace/Whatever before they start receving crap from them. Personally, I don't care if I get crap messages from people, as long as I know who they are. Hitting the trillion spam mark should really serve as warning to how inefficiently the Internet is being used today. Seriously... 62 TRILLION! And all that spam is created by what... 0.001% of all users of the web. How much worse does it have to get? I don't think it matters how great your anti-spam algorith works... with hundreds of trillions of spam messages you are bound to miss thousands or millions as false negatives. Of course there are stupid/naive people all around, but leaving things as they are, completely unregulated and wide open will only make things worse as time goes by."
- Julio H. Morimoto
"Well.. Sometimes I wonder if XP became such a stable OS (compared to other versions of Windows in the past) that indeed... it's just more lucrative to keep fixing flaw after flaw on Vista and new versions of the same OS."
- Julio H. Morimoto
"It still puzzles me that this trick still and actually works. Such an old sales habit and most people still fall for it. I read an article once that explained a similarly old sales trick, where sellers set prices with complicated values (such as $2,38 or $37,76) to "trick" obsessive people who bargain too much. When the seller uses round prices (such as $2,00 or $20,00) our brains use a certain "bargain ruler" which measures changes in price that take round numbers into account. This way, when we bargain for a $20,00 item, we call for lower prices such as $15,00 or $10,00. However, if the item costs $27,64, this ruler in our brains automatically scale down to lower price changes. So we start calling for lower prices in lower ranges. Let's leave it at $25 bucks and it's a deal! Funny, but very interesting."
- Julio H. Morimoto