shuyung wrote:
For instance, documented cases of licenses being revoked. If the point of a license is simply to extract $SOME_MONEY from a person and document their name and address, it does not matter if revocation processes are in place or planned. I am not appealing to history, I am neither claiming that because testing was not originally a requirement for licensing that it is not now, nor that it should become that way again. For the refutation that safety is a primary concern of a driver's license, I compare against other licenses. For instance, a pilot's license, which is much more comprehensive than a driver's license.
Comparing to other licenses doesn't really estblish much of anything. There's no reason different licenses couldn't have different purposes. In fact, your paragraph here is rambling and very difficult to comprehend. Ok, licenses do cost money and that is
a purpose of issuing one, but I see nothing to indicate it's the main one. Pilot's licenses? Yes; they're more difficult to qualify for than a driver's license because aircraft are more difficult to operate than ground vehicles and the potential damage in an accident is much greater because much greater potential speeds and mass are involved.
I really can't tell where you're going with the above paragraph. You may want to proofread it and restate it in a more clear and to-the-point manner.
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After the fact, and if proved, it may nullify a license. Until such time, however, that issuance is valid.
If it's known that duress involved at the time of execution, the legal process will not be completed. Moreover, although people may proceed as if its valid until the duress is discovered, it is quite possible to void anything that happened under that process retroactively if it is discovered that the process would not have been valid had the facts been known at the time. In any case, theis really isn't relevant to anything we're discussin.
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Accidents involving >1 vehicle is a subset of all accidents, yes. Accidents involving a single vehicle and property are a subset of all accidents, too. Would you classify the intersection of a vehicle and a small woodland creature as an accident? What about a vehicle and a large woodland creature? If your reason for licensing of a motor vehicle is that the potential is present for impact to more than the owner/operator of said vehicle, why do you reject that same potential as insufficient reasoning for licensing of computers?
If it causes damage to the property of or injury to any person, it is an accident. No damage + no injury = no accident; the polcie will take no report and no claim may be filed as there is no damage to be remedied. In general, small creatures will not cause damage so most of the time that would not be an accident, while a large creature like a dear, often will. Are you trying to suggest that various woodland critters have some sort of legal standing as traffic accident victims?
As for computers, I explained this already. Computer accidents are few, far between, and have little propensity ot cause harm to persons or their property. It was countered that there are numerous ways people can use computers in malfeasent acts both directly and indirectly to cause harm. I have pointed out that while that is true, licensing does not concern itself with preventing malfeasant acts as these are already regulated by other laws; they concern themselves with competance to avoid accidental harm. As neither the nature nor the severity nor the frequency of computer accidents is similar to that of vehicles, nor is the internet freely publicly accessible as the street is (one must generally pay for the service of internet access to a private company) nor is it equally practicable to issue such licenses, there is no good reason that computers should have licensing requirements similar to vehicles.
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The Slashdot Effect is real, present, requires no malice, and inflicts harm. Simply because you haven't heard of it does not negate that.
Perhaps it would be helpful then, if you explained this and gave some sources rather than simply asserting it. No, I am not going to go look it up on my own; you're using it to support some argument; you show how it does.