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Re: Launch F@h at Startup?
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Last edited by Publius on Thu Feb 05, 2009 7:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Launch F@h at Startup?
You obviously just don't get it.Publius wrote:The person wouldn't know, so it wouldn't cause them to harbor any ill will towards the cause.Flathead74 wrote:If you become commit "civil disobedience" on my electrical usage, I'm sure that
I will be quite upset with you and therefore most likely harbor ill feelings toward any of your causes.
Even if some systems failed, it would still result in more folding in the end.Flathead74 wrote:You do not have control over how the fah client acts/interacts with work units.
What happens if systems are compromised to the point of being unavailable for their intended use,
and due to the "stealth" installations, their users do not realize the cause of the problems?
You would end up doing much more harm than good.
Anyways, I don't really think someone should actually do this.
What part of theft don't you understand?
As far as resulting in more folding in the end, there is an old adage that could apply, regarding public relations,
it goes something like this; a satisfied user tells one other person, a dissatisfied user tells ten people.
Re: Launch F@h at Startup?
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Last edited by Publius on Thu Feb 05, 2009 7:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Launch F@h at Startup?
More so when the existing laws are immoral. That is not the case with fah.Publius wrote:
Of course it's illegal. My point was that breaking the law can be morally justifiable. Take civil disobedience for example.
It's not work the risk of getting your points deleted by Stanford, let alone fired from a good job, or even prosecuted by your employer. If you haven't guessed already, it's frowned on VERY heavily here, all joking aside.
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