U.S. Department of Interior Ordered Offline
The whole of the U.S. Department of Interior has been forced off of the internet as a result of a court case Cobell v. Babbit. This was the result of compromises with the Microsoft Windows servers. A judge decided to take the whole of the organization down. Should this judge have this much power? Info here on the
indian trust web site. This includes the BLM, USGS and the Park Service. Staggering, really. CD: Hold off on the blaming of MS, it's still not clear.
This would be like the Government sending my tax return in cash -- it's irresposible because anyone could easily open my mailbox and find almost $3 of totally spendible money ready and waiting.
It seems to be that forcing the whole system offline until it's ready for the modern internet was the only responsible course of action here.
Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
...on the indian trust web site...
You'd think they would use apache...
Patrick Cable II
You must have missed it in the article where the judge ruled that there should be a story posted on /. with a link to the DOI website to enforce the downtime via the /. effect.
This judge is one smart cookie, I tell ya.
I managed to get in before it all went down. I am now officially 3/4 Cherokee and the legitimate owner of South Dakota.
Thank you Microsoft.
-Rothfuss
CD: Hold off on the blaming of MS, it's still not clear.
/., they said it'd help.
Can I still bash Microsoft if I really, really want to?
I just couldn't help blaming Microsoft whenever I see 'Microsoft Windows' in the news roundup. This is something like complusory-anti-microsoft something, I think I've medical clearance to back my action. People in 'Anti-Microsoft Anonymous' recommends me to post in