Our server costs ~$56 per month to run. Please consider donating or becoming a Patron to help keep the site running. Help us gain new members by following us on Twitter and liking our page on Facebook!
Current time: December 22, 2024, 8:19 am

Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
This number is illegal in the USA
#11
RE: This number is illegal in the USA
(May 6, 2016 at 10:01 pm)SteelCurtain Wrote:
(May 6, 2016 at 9:47 pm)Minimalist Wrote: Not 69?

Rule 34

I didn't get that memo.
Reply
#12
RE: This number is illegal in the USA
(May 5, 2016 at 2:43 am)Aractus Wrote:
Code:
N = 493108359702850190027577767239076495728490777215020863208075\
   018409792627885097658864557802013660073286795447341128317353\
   678312015575359819785450548115719393458773300380099326195058\
   764525023820408110189885042615176579941704250889037029119015\
   870030479432826073821469541570330227987557681895601624030064\
   111516900872879838194258271674564774816684347928464580929131\
   531860070010043353189363193439129486044503709919800477094629\
   215581807111691530318762884778783541575932891093295447350881\
   882465495060005019006274705305381164278294267474853496525745\
   368151170655028190555265622135314631042100866286797114446706\
   366921982586158111251555650481342076867323407655054859108269\
   562666930662367997021048123965625180068183236539593483956753\
   575575324619023481064700987753027956186892925380693305204238\
   149969945456945774138335689906005870832181270486113368202651\
   590516635187402901819769393767785292872210955041292579257381\
   866058450150552502749947718831293104576980909153046133594190\
   302588132059322774443852550466779024518697062627788891979580\
   423065750615669834695617797879659201644051939960716981112615\
   195610276283233982579142332172696144374438105648552934887634\
   921030988702878745323313253212267863328370279250997499694887\
   759369159176445880327183847402359330203748885067557065879194\
   611341932307814854436454375113207098606390746417564121635042\
   388002967808558670370387509410769821183765499205204368255854\
   642288502429963322685369124648550007559166402472924071645072\
   531967449995294484347419021077296068205581309236268379879519\
   661997982855258871610961365617807456615924886608898164568541\
   721362920846656279131478466791550965154310113538586208196875\
   836883595577893914545393568199609880854047659073589728989834\
   250471289184162658789682185380879562790399786294493976054675\
   348212567501215170827371076462707124675321024836781594000875\
   05452543537

Source

I bring this up because the USA are pretty extremist on IP laws favouring super rich publishers. As mentioned in my previous thread, the Productivity Commission (AU) draft report into IP has suggested dropping software patents altogether and reducing the term of copyright to just 15-25 years in total (as opposed to, well, the perpetual copyrights of today which are defined as "life of author + 70 years" with many corporate publishers asserting authorship over copyrighted works to make the term of copyright last forever).

The number above is a prime number, and is used to decrypt CSS. Note that the same draft Productivity Commission report mentioned states clearly that any copyright infringement that does not directly harm the owner should not be an infringement. In otherwords, we should indeed pave the way for people to be able to decrypt their own movies however they want, so long as their enjoyment isn't directly harmful to the copyright owner. That would seem downright sensible.

To quote:
Quote:Australia's copyright system has progressively expanded and protects works longer than necessary to encourage creative endeavour, with consumers bearing the cost.

It'll be an uphill battle to bring about change, but it'll be great when we do. Hopefully if we and other commonwealth countries like Canada start showing some real initiative on IP then other countries will follow the example - instead of following the USA into banning public libraries and deliberately extending existing copyrights so they don't enter public domain (under the guise of "restoring copyrights").

Call me stupid, because all of this is confusing. But could you put this in layman's terms for those of us who never got beyond consumer math in high school?
Disclaimer: I am only responsible for what I say, not what you choose to understand. 
(November 14, 2018 at 8:57 pm)The Valkyrie Wrote: Have a good day at work.  If we ever meet in a professional setting, let me answer your question now.  Yes, I DO want fries with that.
Reply
#13
RE: This number is illegal in the USA
(May 6, 2016 at 10:55 pm)Nymphadora Wrote:
(May 5, 2016 at 2:43 am)Aractus Wrote:
Code:
N = 493108359702850190027577767239076495728490777215020863208075\
   018409792627885097658864557802013660073286795447341128317353\
   678312015575359819785450548115719393458773300380099326195058\
   764525023820408110189885042615176579941704250889037029119015\
   870030479432826073821469541570330227987557681895601624030064\
   111516900872879838194258271674564774816684347928464580929131\
   531860070010043353189363193439129486044503709919800477094629\
   215581807111691530318762884778783541575932891093295447350881\
   882465495060005019006274705305381164278294267474853496525745\
   368151170655028190555265622135314631042100866286797114446706\
   366921982586158111251555650481342076867323407655054859108269\
   562666930662367997021048123965625180068183236539593483956753\
   575575324619023481064700987753027956186892925380693305204238\
   149969945456945774138335689906005870832181270486113368202651\
   590516635187402901819769393767785292872210955041292579257381\
   866058450150552502749947718831293104576980909153046133594190\
   302588132059322774443852550466779024518697062627788891979580\
   423065750615669834695617797879659201644051939960716981112615\
   195610276283233982579142332172696144374438105648552934887634\
   921030988702878745323313253212267863328370279250997499694887\
   759369159176445880327183847402359330203748885067557065879194\
   611341932307814854436454375113207098606390746417564121635042\
   388002967808558670370387509410769821183765499205204368255854\
   642288502429963322685369124648550007559166402472924071645072\
   531967449995294484347419021077296068205581309236268379879519\
   661997982855258871610961365617807456615924886608898164568541\
   721362920846656279131478466791550965154310113538586208196875\
   836883595577893914545393568199609880854047659073589728989834\
   250471289184162658789682185380879562790399786294493976054675\
   348212567501215170827371076462707124675321024836781594000875\
   05452543537

Source

I bring this up because the USA are pretty extremist on IP laws favouring super rich publishers. As mentioned in my previous thread, the Productivity Commission (AU) draft report into IP has suggested dropping software patents altogether and reducing the term of copyright to just 15-25 years in total (as opposed to, well, the perpetual copyrights of today which are defined as "life of author + 70 years" with many corporate publishers asserting authorship over copyrighted works to make the term of copyright last forever).

The number above is a prime number, and is used to decrypt CSS. Note that the same draft Productivity Commission report mentioned states clearly that any copyright infringement that does not directly harm the owner should not be an infringement. In otherwords, we should indeed pave the way for people to be able to decrypt their own movies however they want, so long as their enjoyment isn't directly harmful to the copyright owner. That would seem downright sensible.

To quote:

It'll be an uphill battle to bring about change, but it'll be great when we do. Hopefully if we and other commonwealth countries like Canada start showing some real initiative on IP then other countries will follow the example - instead of following the USA into banning public libraries and deliberately extending existing copyrights so they don't enter public domain (under the guise of "restoring copyrights").

Call me stupid, because all of this is confusing. But could you put this in layman's terms for those of us who never got beyond consumer math in high school?

A computer program can be viewed as one long number, if you interpret all its bytes as digits, roughly speaking. A prime number is a number which you cannot divide by anything except 1 and itself without remainder, such as 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13...
There is an infinite number of them, and finding very big ones or ones with special properties, with many hundred digits or more, has important applications in encryption and as a mathematical curiosity. There are websites which publish large prime numbers ppl discover for scientific purposes.

Now, what would happen, legally, if one were to recast a computer program which is illegal to distribute, such as the decss-ptogram for decrypting copyprotected DVDs , in such a way that its bytes were one huge prime number? Primes are just a fact of nature, such as pi or the golden ratio, how could their distribution possibly be illegal. This is the amusing conundrum they exploited here.
The fool hath said in his heart, There is a God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.
Psalm 14, KJV revised edition

Reply
#14
RE: This number is illegal in the USA
I haz confuz. 

But you guys are hot with yout math and your codes. Sexy devils, you.
"Hipster is what happens when young hot people do what old ladies do." -Exian
Reply



Possibly Related Threads...
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Is zero a natural number? Jehanne 81 10297 July 16, 2023 at 7:29 am
Last Post: Angrboda
  Euclid proved that there are an infinite number of prime numbers. Jehanne 7 1165 March 14, 2021 at 8:26 am
Last Post: Gawdzilla Sama
  Graham's Number GrandizerII 15 2426 February 18, 2018 at 4:58 pm
Last Post: GrandizerII
  The Magical Number 9 Rhondazvous 25 5724 December 30, 2015 at 4:47 pm
Last Post: The Grand Nudger
  Tricky Number Sequence Puzzle GrandizerII 16 6461 January 20, 2015 at 2:35 am
Last Post: Whateverist
  Number crunching curios pocaracas 24 10023 January 4, 2014 at 2:14 am
Last Post: Belac Enrobso
  The nature of number jonb 82 42488 October 28, 2012 at 11:02 pm
Last Post: jonb
  number puzzle 1-8 aufis 5 13185 April 24, 2010 at 6:44 am
Last Post: aufis



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)