Slashdot Mirror


Slashback: OSX Security, DoD Filtering, Anonymous Posting

Slashdot tonight brings some corrections, clarifications, and updates to previous Slashdot stories, including some favorable results from the University of Wisconsin's Mac OS X Challenge, skeptics investigate cold fusion claims, more on DoD web filtering, AT&T cuts 10,000 jobs after BellSouth merger, more child-proofing efforts for MySpace, Why Windows Vista Will Suck: a rebuttal, Harvard Professor punished for reporting bugs, Assemblyman Biondi backpedals on NJ anonymous posting bill, and a followup on Chinese TLDs -- Read on for details.

University of Wisconsin's Mac OS X Challenge. HABITcky writes "The University of Wisconsin Security Challenge has ended after 38 hours, intermittent DoS attacks, 4000 ssh login attempts, a bandwidth spike of 30 Mbps, and 6 million logged ipfw events. During this time there were 'no successful access attempts, nor any claims of a successful attempt.' You may remember this challenge was proposed in response to the 'woefully misleading' ZDnet article, Mac OS X hacked under 30 minutes, which was previously discussed here on Slashdot."

Skeptics investigate cold fusion.smooth wombat writes "As a follow-up to a previous Slashdot posting, Purdue University is investigating the claims of Rusi Taleyarkhan who claimed in 2004 to have created nuclear fusion at room temperature. The investigation came about from complaints from colleagues who suspect something is amiss. Taleyarkhan, who used to work at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has, since working at Perdue, removed the equipment the co-workers were using to try and replicate the results, claimed results for experimental runs were positive for fusion despite the co-workers never seeing the raw data and opposed the publication of results which contradicted his findings."

More on DoD web filtering. timetrap writes "I work in a mobile combat communications unit, while I'm not in the sandbox right now, I can attest to the DoD policy on blocking web access. First of all when you are down range don't expect to even get DSL speeds from a satellite, we usually roll with about 256kbs for the data side of our trunk. So blocking sites is very important, otherwise 4 or 5 people could start streaming audio and pretty much knock down any legitimate use of the network. We filter websites with smartfilter and yes the military system admins in the IPO office will unblock any web site that isn't blocked by local policy (no pr0n, no streaming audio, no civilian web mail: both the hot and the g varieties, and no chat programs; although irc is used by the DoD) This is no Orwellian conspiracy, but quick and easy system administration; apply smartfilter: check! If you want to check the current smartfilter blocked sites goto: securecomputing and submit some sites to check." Slashdot's own Jamie took a look at Smartfilter back in '99 as a part of the Censorware project and it still remains a mysterious black box to this day. While some would advocate full disclosure using censorware still appears to be merely passing the buck.

AT&T cuts 10,000 jobs after BellSouth merger. mytrip writes to tell us that immediately following their $67 billion acquisition of BellSouth, AT&T plans on cutting about 10,000 jobs.

More child-proofing efforts for MySpace. conq writes "BusinessWeek has an interview with Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthalin in which he describes measures MySpace and other similar sites should take to protect children. From the article: 'We're going to be suggesting some very specific measures that MySpace can take based on our conversations with MySpace as well as with other law enforcement authorities at the state and local levels. We've received hundreds of complaints from parents who are concerned about these issues, and we want to be sure that the measures we propose are technologically feasible and financially viable.'"

Why Windows Vista will Suck: a rebuttal. shrapnull writes "Hot on the heels of Extreme Tech's 'Why Windows Vista Won't Suck', Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols has an alternate position posted on DesktopLinux, and sent to subscribers of Novell's 'Suse Linux Cool Solutions' newsletter."

Harvard researcher punished for reporting bugs. Guillermito writes "A story previously discussed came to a sad conclusion two weeks ago. The bottom line is this means that it is forbidden to use reverse engineering tools to find bugs in a software. You also have to prove that you own a valid license for each version of the tested software. To publish a proof of concept that contains a few dozens of copyrighted bytes is also forbidden. It's a nice precedent for any company selling a defective product."

Assemblyman Biondi backpedals on NJ anonymous posting bill. Quadraginta writes "Earlier, denizens of Slashdot reacted to a story about a bill to be introduced to the New Jersey legislature that would require hosts of forums, bulletin boards and the like to keep track of the real identity of anonymous posters. Seems like there was a strong reaction all over. Assemblyman Biondi now appears to be backpedalling furiously. From a letter quoted after the link: 'I am getting inundated with responses which I will review and use to better educate myself on the implications of this bill. If, after reviewing all of the correspondence and the opinion of OLS, it turns out that the bill is, in fact, unworkable, I will certainly reconsider and withdraw it.'"

A followup on Chinese TLDs. nqz writes "In this story on ComputerWorld, ICANN and the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) both dispute a previous story discussing China's new top-level domains containing Chinese characters."

145 of 211 comments (clear)

  1. OSX security by saberworks · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The original article said it would be up through Friday, why the early shutdown? Maybe it stayed up for 38 hours or whatever and then someone got in, so they post-pre-maturely ended the contest the minute before the crack?

    1. Re:OSX security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Pretty sure it was because the university did not like the increased server load it was getting, and it wasn't something that the university approved to begin with.

    2. Re:OSX security by HTTP+Error+403+403.9 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The original article said it would be up through Friday, why the early shutdown? Maybe it stayed up for 38 hours or whatever and then someone got in, so they post-pre-maturely ended the contest the minute before the crack?

      More like the campus IT head went ape shit regarding the amount of bandwidth eaten up by this contest.

      --
      I'm not a Troll, it's reverse psychology.
    3. Re:OSX security by wealthychef · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not just bandwidth, but if you were the head admin of their network, how thrilled would you be that somebody hung a big sign on your campus saying "please attack us"?

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    4. Re:OSX security by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      Not just bandwidth, but if you were the head admin of their network, how thrilled would you be that somebody hung a big sign on your campus saying "please attack us"?

      Sufficiently so, apparently:

      And yes, this challenge is sanctioned. I'm glad that the University of Wisconsin supports the genuine interests of its faculty, staff, and students, and encourages individual thought, research, discovery, and exploration. That's why it's a great place to be!
      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:OSX security by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      Scratch that. I was shooting for "Informative", but ended up with "Should Have Read Further Down First".

      Now back to your regularly scheduled programming...

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  2. Oops! by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Informative
    http://test.doit.wisc.edu/
    Yesterday we discovered the Mac OSX "challenge" was not an activity authorized by the UW-Madison. Once the test came to the attention of our CIO, she ended it. The site, test.doit.wisc.edu, will be removed from the network tonight. Our primary concern is for security and network access for UW services. We are sorry for any inconvenience this has caused to the community.
    I guess Dave Schroeder had it authorized, just not authorized by the right person?

    CIO = Chief Information Officer
    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Oops! by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 4, Insightful

      University of Wisconsin's Mac OS X Challenge. HABITcky writes "The University of Wisconsin Security Challenge has ended after 38 hours, intermittent DoS attacks, 4000 ssh login attempts, a bandwidth spike of 30 Mbps, and 6 million logged ipfw events. During this time there were 'no successful access attempts, nor any claims of a successful attempt.

      I think it is woefully misleading to not mention that the challenge was ended early!

    2. Re:Oops! by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Informative

      I agree with you 100%

      And how come we don't have a link to the information contained in the Slashback? I'm not questioning the veracity of the information, cause Schroeder is on the up and up, but where'd HABITcky read about it?

      P.S. Google cache of the site before the contest was ended.
      http://64.233.179.104/search?q=cache:test.doit.wis c.edu/

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Oops! by rayde · · Score: 4, Interesting

      i had asked this question initially and Dave had thought the was given permission. But I suspected that the proximity of his response challenge to the failure of the original mac mini challenge meant it was done with slightly less than comprehensive permission. woops.

    4. Re:Oops! by jaypeg · · Score: 1

      An engineer in search of the truth, what's he doing at a University?

    5. Re:Oops! by Biff+Stu · · Score: 3, Funny

      In that case, it's a damn shame it wasn't hacked. It seems that he would have welcomed an escallation of permissions.

    6. Re:Oops! by HABITcky · · Score: 5, Interesting

      At the time of my submission (around 12:30pm today), the http://test.doit.wisc.edu/ website did not appear as it does now. It appeared as an updated version of what you see in the Google cache. There was an updated posting on the site from Schroeder earlier this morning mentioning that the challenge had ended and giving the statistics which I included in my submission. The posting had no mention of the challenge ending early or the messege that is currently displayed, it mearly stated that the challenge had ended and there was no successful access by anyone.

    7. Re:Oops! by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      "Well, in all my years working here, she never told me NOT to issue hacking challenges."

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    8. Re:Oops! by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      More like, an Apple apologist defending the honor of the Mac.

      Maybe he can get a job at Apple when UW fires him for this stupid stunt.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    9. Re:Oops! by Doctor+Memory · · Score: 1

      Making sub-standard wages as compensation for sub-standard supervision. Same reason a lot of people never leave academia. Work on whatever you like, whenever you feel like it, earn about as much as a bus driver. Maybe it's better at bigger schools, but UW-M doesn't strike me as an especially big school...

      --
      Just junk food for thought...
  3. OS X security competition "ends" by Tumbleweed · · Score: 5, Interesting

    More like - was done without authorization, and was shut down. From the site linked:

    Yesterday we discovered the Mac OSX "challenge" was not an activity authorized by the UW-Madison. Once the test came to the attention of our CIO, she ended it. The site, test.doit.wisc.edu, will be removed from the network tonight.

    Our primary concern is for security and network access for UW services. We are sorry for any inconvenience this has caused to the community.


    Still, shut down or 'ended,' not being hacked is a good show. Congrats to OS X.

    I think Apple would be well-served by having a continously running OS X security challenge, for both OS X and OS X Server. Offer a reward every time you demonstrate a hole, and fix them fast.

    1. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think Apple would be well-served by having a continously running OS X security challenge, for both OS X and OS X Server. Offer a reward every time you demonstrate a hole, and fix them fast.

      Would be nice to see something like this for all platforms. The only question is how valid is the test, since the security of computer depends as much on the network security around it, as the machine itself. Firewalls can help filter out much of the bad traffic, reducing the final impact on the host. I would not like to say that any system is invunerable, since vunerability also depends on the configuration of the machine and the people managing the installation. A well patched windows installation might be as good as a well patched OS X installation.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    2. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by Tumbleweed · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Would be nice to see something like this for all platforms. The only question is how valid is the test, since the security of computer depends as much on the network security around it, as the machine itself.

      Well, if it's ever done by Apple, it would best be done as a tool to actually help find security vulnerabilities, rather than as a marketing effort. To that end, I'd suggest whatever configuration would best expose those vulnerabilities.

      A similar test for local vulnerabilites would also, obviously, be quite valuable (as the ZDNet test showed).

    3. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by Coryoth · · Score: 4, Informative

      Would be nice to see something like this for all platforms.

      Well it's not exactly identical, but one of the people who works on SELinux has been running a test machine on and off since Fedora Core 2. Details are here. Similar to the OS X box that was hacked in 30 minutes he does have SSH open and provides you with local account access, the local account being root. I wouls suggest that that shows a certain amount of confidence in its security. Also note that SELinux is coming to Ubuntu soon.

      Jedidiah.

    4. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by kcarlin · · Score: 1

      Given the huge variety of requirements and configurations in the field (and the reluctance of good security people to engage in public debate on/divulgence of their security measures) many and simultaneous competitions would be required. No vendor (other than Steve Jobs with his awesome Mark 20 Reality Distortion Field with Inverted Takeovers and Landings) would be viewed as a credible host for a competition targeting their own products, or anyone else's for that matter. By extension, an agent hired or otherwise compensated by the company would have credibility issues as well, requiring an awful lot of prestige points to overcome the whiff of chicanery. I've seen things of this sort in bake-offs associated with Federal procurements (usually around easily measured stuff like transaction processing database performance), and in big-deal trade studies commissioned by Fortune 500s. In a vendor on vendor competition the opportunities that arise for legal action are tremendous. And, of course, by the time you've worked through all the issues and staged something, your CIO shows up to work and shuts you down or some patent officer passes a slew of new patents on the use of binary algebras in electronic devices and a small Virginia company bilks the planet for trillions of dollars and requires all such devices to recite one hour of Vogon poetry per day. (Oops, I've overdosed on my /hype today, I need to take my /lithium and put my /feet up.)

      Cool idea, though. So who can afford to take all that on and has the motivation and doesn't have a dog in the fight? Assuming that Bono turns us down, of course. (That whole red & black iPod thing, might be a problem, somebody might throw a chair or something, and Africa is on line 2...)

      --
      Free Adam Smith! (Or best offer.)
    5. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by ummit · · Score: 1
      ...the security of computer depends as much on the network security around it, as the machine itself. Firewalls can help filter out much of the bad traffic...

      Firewalls can help, yes, but you don't want to depend on them for security. Individual machines really need to be able to withstand attacks on their own. If they can't, they're vulnerable to attacks originating from within your firewall-protected LAN, and such attacks are not merely a theoretical possibility -- they happen.

    6. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by ePhil_One · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Firewalls can help filter out much of the bad traffic, reducing the final impact on the host.

      Yes, but what happens when someone cracks the Windows box sitting next to IT. If you want to say your box is secure, you better not be adding the caveat "behind a firewall with the network cable unplugged".

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    7. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by bananaendian · · Score: 1

      > Would be nice to see something like this for all platforms.

      Well, huh! Here's a challenge! I've got a Windows box which you can attack at IP 124.235.13... [silence]

      PS: What's even funnier is I've actually got a W2K webserver/SSH/SFTP server running here but I dare not give the IP away at slashdot - if OSX has 'an unpublished vulnerability' I wonder how many Windows does..

      --
      www.tribalnetworks.org - helping tribal people around the world to own their own means of high-tech communications
    8. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      What did the owner of that IP do to piss you off?

      If you go to that IP with a browser you'll see that there is a challenge.


      Please do tell me this is not goatse :-/ I am already traumatised for life and I am now in rehab.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    9. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by DenDave · · Score: 1

      Well then perhaps Slashdot should give Steve-o a call and offer to run the test? I am sure the bandwith would be reasonable for /. and it would be a great publicity stunt, Iwould nt be surprised if Jonathan Schwartz at SUN would retaliate by giving /. one of their boxes to test...

      minimac vs. SUN Fire! LOL!!

      --
      -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
    10. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by cswiger2005 · · Score: 1
      Would be nice to see something like this for all platforms.

      Sure, no problem-- just connect a machine running the platform of your choice to the Internet and let it go. :-)

      A well patched windows installation might be as good as a well patched OS X installation.

      That certainly hasn't been true in the past, but sooner or later, OS X is likely going to have some high-profile incidents like a Slammer or Nimda equivalent. It's also true that Intel-based Macs are going to be easier targets for people used to writing x86-based malware than the older PowerPC based hardware.

      In any event, Windows-based attacks on public IPs occur so frequently that an unpatched Windows machine, say a fresh install from a CD, is likely to be compromised in less than an hour, and it's entirely possible for a fresh install of Windows to be hacked before the admin can finish downloading the first run of security patches.

      But don't get me wrong, anyone who runs a webserver nowadays can watch the computer equivalent of assault happening against PHP vulnerabilities, blogging software vulnerabilities, formmail.pl, and lots of other things.

      --
      "The human race's favorite method for being in control of the facts is to ignore them." -Celia Green
    11. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by Maximum+Prophet · · Score: 1

      Yep, if you could set up the machine to boot from a SAN or dual-port drive. The victim machine would be connected raw to the internet, and another isolated machine would monitor the files on the SAN with something like Tripwire (tm) and capture the machine state once it had been hacked. (Some OSes like AIX provide support for a hardware initiated dump of memory)

      Every vendor should do this with several machines. One would be a published, "Attack this" machine, and others would simply be registered using provocative names like finance.apple.com and source-code.apple.com

      --
      All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
    12. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by Creepy · · Score: 1

      I had my suspicions this would not be hacked - unless there's a flaw in ssh, you need to come through the web server, which is running as a user with no file or directory ownership. If this machine had, say phpNUKE running on it, it would have been a much juicier prospect.

      Things I've noticed that can cause security risks on a web server:
      a) allows write access under the document root - many CMS (Content management systems) have such a mechanism to cache images like avatars (which honestly should go in the database), but say a hacker uploads a script instead of an image (I sure hope it's getting validated...) and by knowing the structure of the CMS can execute the script as the web user (www on mac) - whee - you've got at least limited system access (and could at minimum deface other avatars). This is one reason why 99% of my web servers are read only by www (and not owned by www) - only the writing required directories like an avatars directory is owned by www and permissions are 200 or 600 (for UNIX noobs, it's set by the chmod command - 3 columns of read=4, write=2, execute=1 - add them, first is user, second is group, third is other) - write or read/write only by the www user. 777 permissions, requirements given by such CMS as MDPro is terrible advice and definitely not needed. btw, instead of chmod, you could use ACLs on Tiger - see this article on Ars Technica

      b) runs as root (e.g. cgi-bin)

      c) runs with X windows and other apps open (say rlogin - if you can write a .rhosts file to /Library/Webserver you can log in as www without needing a password... I've used .rhosts hacks on UNIX for a long time - ever since I learned I was exploited that way during my introduction to UNIX in the late 1980s - that and tucking away mini-user change executables with the 's' bit set if I'm given root for an instant - like thru an exploit).

    13. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by Creepy · · Score: 1

      oh - I think I was a bit vague above - by 'script' in a) I meant a .php executable script (php is a scripting language) or other scripting language that the web server may be using - I don't mean shell script, which would probably require an exploit of some kind to execute it. I said script originally because there are alternatives to php, even if php is one of the most common.

    14. Re:OS X security competition "ends" by despisethesun · · Score: 1

      In any event, Windows-based attacks on public IPs occur so frequently that an unpatched Windows machine, say a fresh install from a CD, is likely to be compromised in less than an hour, and it's entirely possible for a fresh install of Windows to be hacked before the admin can finish downloading the first run of security patches.

      I'll confirm this. Not that long ago, I reinstalled Windows XP Pro on one of my machines and the first time I logged in there were dozens of viruses and other malware already running on my system. It had been compromised before the installation had even been completed. I used another computer to download the necessary security updates, burned them to a CD, and reinstalled without my network cable attached and didn't have the same problems, but it was still very disconcerting. After patching it was fine, but I'm still wary of booting into Windows because I'm never sure what new vunerabilities have popped up in the time I've been using Linux between Windows boots.

      --
      This poo is cold.
  4. Re: Mac Challenge by Chas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I dunno. I would think a massive, pipe-clogging bandwidth spike, which resulted in the removal of said site, would qualify as a successful attack.

    I guess it all just depends on exactly what you want to do.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  5. chinese tld's by noopy · · Score: 2, Interesting
    China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) both dispute a previous story

    Does it matter what they say? Any Chinese portal with enough heft can just start handing out Chinese TLDs whenever they like. (For that matter, so could I, but noone would know). Does anyone know the current state of international tld support in browsers? And what encoding is/would it support?

    For that matter, if China (mainland) blazes the path for Chinese TLDs, would they go with gb2312 and thus sort of make China (mainland)'s TLD scheme the default for the world as opposed to Taiwan's Big5?

    Myself, I'd be happy to see utf-8 tlds, but that's small potatoes compared to my fervent whish for a utf-8 clean php release. Does slashdot support

    1. Re:chinese tld's by metternich · · Score: 1

      Slashdot doesn't currently support any posting in Chinese as far as I can tell. I tried posting an example of how a Mandrain Speaker might get around a filter on the word Democracy (hint: 1337 doesn't work in a character based system). I tried twice but neither time did the characters show up at all, not even in some sort of garbbled equivelent.

      --
      Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.
    2. Re:chinese tld's by liangzai · · Score: 1

      Simplified Chinese as in GB2312 is severly outdated, although still in heavy use on the Web, mainly because users don't know better. The same is true for traditional Chinese as in Big5 or other character encodings.

      No, if the Chinese would go their own way and make everything Chinese, which they won't btw, they would use the Chinese encoding GB18030. Note that this is neither a simplified Chinese encoding nor a traditional Chinese encoding, it is just a *Chinese* encoding, compatible with Unicode and able to represent all Chinese characters ever in use. This is the government mandated encoding, and computer companies are require to support it if they want to operate in China.

      So please stop referring to "simplified" and "traditional"; this is mostly a Taiwanese political thingy, not an issue on China. Thus, there only is a Chinese encoding, and it is called GB18030.

    3. Re:chinese tld's by noopy · · Score: 1

      I don't see mention of simplified nor traditional until your "please stop referring". And "thus, there is only one..." is neither a conclusion nor even true.

      There certainly is a difference between simplified and traditional, esp. as there are cases of multiple traditional hanzi mapping to only one simplified. Moreover, outside of China (that other place), there are Japanese-only characters, which may or may not be called "Chinese", I don't really care, but they are certainly not "Chinese" as in "part of Chinese language/culture/nation" since they were invented and are used only in Japan.

      If you're referring to the unified Han character set of Unicode, then perhaps some emphasis on "unified" rather than "Han" might steer us away from blatantly political trolling and towards productive discussion.

      Otherwise, we are left with nothing better than: perhaps this is a China political thingy, not an issue on Taiwan.

    4. Re:chinese tld's by liangzai · · Score: 1

      You originally wrote:

      "For that matter, if China (mainland) blazes the path for Chinese TLDs, would they go with gb2312 and thus sort of make China (mainland)'s TLD scheme the default for the world as opposed to Taiwan's Big5?"

      Thus you referred implicitly to a simplified character encoding (GB2312) and a traditional (Big5). The mistake is that China doesn't endore any simplified encoding at all, but only a genuinely Chinese encoding, GB18030. Since this set is compatible with Unicode, it also incorporates all Western, Japanese, Korean and whatever scripts.

      Traditional characters are not a problem in China, but simplified characters are a huge problem on Taiwan, because the simplified script is outlawed for political reasons (it is said to be a "communist" thing, although the simplification process began already in the Republican era after the wu-si yundong in 1919; the "communists" just fulfilled what everyone agreed on, and today Taiwan is pissed because they are being marginalized).

      The answer to your original question is thus still that China will not go with anything that opposes Big5, since this encoding soup is already history (except on Taiwan).

    5. Re:chinese tld's by noopy · · Score: 1

      "and today Taiwan is pissed because they are being marginalized"
      They sorta have to be, or else everyone will forget that they want to be their own little country, and when China swallows it up, noone will care (except them).

  6. Windows no longer uses BSD network stack by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 4, Informative

    It did, in the old days. They rewrote it a long time ago, I think in the jump to Nt 4.0. The userspace command line tools are still BSD based in XP though.

    1. Re:Windows no longer uses BSD network stack by 1053r · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For all of you dual booting people, try this:

      $cat ftp.exe|grep california

      You should get the "Copyright blah-blah regents of the universty of california, berkley" or something similar, I can't quite remember

    2. Re:Windows no longer uses BSD network stack by NetNifty · · Score: 3, Informative

      netnifty@netnifty_linux ~ $ strings ftp.exe | grep -i Cali
      @(#) Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.

      That's from the Windows XP 64-bit Edition ftp.exe, but keep in mind that this is just the text based ftp client, and not the TCP/IP stack we're looking at here. Anyone know which file(s) contains the Windows TCP/IP stack?

    3. Re:Windows no longer uses BSD network stack by Keeper · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you're really curious, just run the same command on every binary under the windows folder; if you only see command line tools spit out, the TCP/IP stack obviously won't have that string in it ..

    4. Re:Windows no longer uses BSD network stack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Windows IP stack kernel driver is tcpip.sys. No BSD attribution in there.

      cmd> ver

      Microsoft Windows [Version 5.2.3790]

      cmd> strings c:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\tcpip.sys | egrep -i california

      cmd>

  7. It was, but... by jd · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...nobody broke into the box to read the statement.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  8. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by thryllkill · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm not a marine, but I do work for the DOD, and I can tell you that most political websites, right or left, are blocked. Again, not a conspiracy, just simple work place web surfing management. When you're on a network that doesn't belong to you, or that you don't pay to have access to, you shouldn't complain about the policies in place. I don't bitch at my friends for not letting me fuck their wives when I come to visit their houses.

    --

    Note to self: No more arguing with the faithful.

  9. DoD filtering by hotspotbloc · · Score: 4, Funny
    no pr0n, no streaming audio, no civilian web mail: both the hot and the g varieties, and no chat programs

    And that's why when it says on your military ID "Property of the U.S. Government" they're not just talking about the ID card ... =)

    --
    "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence or insanity but they've always worked for me" - HST
    1. Re:DoD filtering by 1337p1rt3 · · Score: 1

      Or EOD (Explosive Ordinance Disposal)..but what ever!!

    2. Re:DoD filtering by stuntpope · · Score: 1

      The "no this and that" list may apply to some DoD networks, but it's not DoD wide. We are discouraged to access streaming media, but it's not disallowed or filtered, Hotmail, gmail, Yahoo mail all work, etc. Any chat programs (including IRC), browser tool-bar add-ons are forbidden and scanned for. OTOH, I've experienced whole IP ranges being blocked because one site in that range was deemed bad, even though other sites in the range were legitimate and necessary (software, documentation) for our work.

    3. Re:DoD filtering by techstar25 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We have to keep in mind that internet access at at work is still a privilage and not a right. These folks may be at war, but they are still "at work", so the admin (DOD) can give and take away any kind of access they want. It has nothing to do with censorship of any kind. They are lucky to have internet access at all.

  10. Re:DesktopLinux? by yurnotsoeviltwin · · Score: 1

    Essentially all that article did was admit that Vista had caught up (or at least come close) to Linux in the security and stability departments. Of course, the emphasis there was that Linux did it first, but he neglects to mention that Windows, despite its shortcomings, has always had the clear advantage in the fields of usability and consumer appeal, so essentially all that article did was show that 1) Windows was weaker than Linux in some areas and 2) it isn't anymore. Congratulations Mr. Vaughan-Nichols, you've shown that Vista will be as good as or better than Linux in all respects!

    NOTE: IMHO, it won't be.

  11. (On Vulnerabilities) Idiots. by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    Now the ONLY ONES who will publish exploits are the anonymous hackers who are ALREADY doing illegal stuff.

    Nice move, smartasses.

  12. I am very bothered... by jd · · Score: 5, Interesting
    ...by the effective ban on software research. If you publish a flaw and don't include data backing it, you'll likely be sued for defamation. If you DO include the data (however insignificant) you'll be sued for copyright infringement. The 9/11 case in the US shows that is you do know of a problem, but don't tell anyone, you'll be got that way, too. However, being willfully ignorant of a fault can also land you in court, if it causes harm.


    Software researchers are the most impacted by this, as it's hard for a PhD to claim natural stupidity as a defense. It's expected of most end-users (even when that is unfair) so they can get away with it.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:I am very bothered... by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Interesting
      If you publish a flaw and don't include data backing it, you'll likely be sued for defamation.
      Actually.... If you publish a flaw and don't back it up and then get sued, you can have the pleasure of proving (in a court of law) that their software is teh sux.

      After you've embarrased them (and gotten it into the public record) you can counter-sue them for wasting your time and money. If you're lucky, you can get some punative damages too.

      Unless France is like England, where truth is not a defense against defamation (of which libel & slander are subsets). Other than that, it seems like not including the proof is more prudent than getting bankrupted by copyright claims.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:I am very bothered... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      This is (fortunately for the rest of us) only in France. And he only lost the case because he published some code. So it was a copyright violation. France must have the weirdest copyright laws in the world, because even in the United States the small amount that he published would be protected under fair use.

      Luckily for him, people have been donating to help him pay for his fine.

      --
      Qxe4
    3. Re:I am very bothered... by ZachPruckowski · · Score: 1

      And the libel claim isn't bankrupting? I mean, unless you have a dedicated lawyer already or a pile of money, you'll easily lose a lawsuit to any company, because if they spend $10,000 on lawyers, then (at $200 an hour, which is prolly high-ish), that's 250 hours of lawyering you have to counter. Let's pretend that you're twice as efficient as they are (which I doubt). That's 125 hours you have to spend to counter that. While putting food on the table for you and potentially a family. You're forced to settle by attrition.

    4. Re:I am very bothered... by rohanl · · Score: 1
      Unless France is like England, where truth is not a defense against defamation (of which libel & slander are subset

      IANAL but I believe (at least here in Australia) that truth by itself is not a defence against defamation. In addition to being true, what you say must also be in the public interest.

      In this case I'm sure you'd find plenty of people willing to argue both sides of that. Should keep some lawyers busy for a while...
  13. Solution to security research problem by jmorris42 · · Score: 4, Funny

    There is a fairly simple solution to the problem of vendors forbidding security reaseachers from examining their products. At the next big security confab float and get a lot of signatures on a resolution something like this:

    "Some companies object to our legitimate research, even though we report our findings responsibly. So be it. We resolve to continue to locate defects in these irresponsible vendor's products. However since they now make it a crime to do the right thing, we resolve to anonymously publish our results for these products to the most vile and wicked cracking gangs we can contact as ready to use fully weaponized exploits. We further assert that we do not fear any legal reprecussions on the grounds that if any Fed can tag us we aren't worthy to continue in this line of research."

    Let the business press cogitate on that announcement a day or two and see how fast vendors start backpeddling.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Solution to security research problem by causality · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It sure would be great if every time a company did something that most people, upon a little thought, would find really objectionable, it could be directly correlated with a huge decrease in sales (your basic old fashioned boycott). It would be great if people knew when they were clutching sand and understood that the harder you try to squeeze, the more you are going to lose.

      But as much as I love your idea, it will not happen due to the Sheeple, who are either too clueless, too apathetic, or both, to make this workable. The backbone is becoming extinct and is being replaced by implicit trust, deference to authority, and pressure to conform.

      Since we as a species fail to discourage these elements (and instead work very hard to prop them up, since they would not survive on their own) because the powerful find them desirable to inculcate in a population*, I do not see any easy way to reverse this either.


      * If you're in charge, wouldn't you rather be in charge of a docile apathetic population as opposed to a more difficult to subjugate sort? If you quickly disagree and say you'd never want that, imagine for a moment that you love power (and are therefore not qualified to wield it, but then power and who has it was never a meritocracy). Does it make sense now? We keep focusing on this bad law and this rogue company and that legislator who doesn't get it, but all of these are merely opportunists and with such a narrow focus we are merely playing a whack-a-mole game. None of these would ever be possible without the masses being so willing to bend over and take it, and the blame lies with them and not with the inevitability that someone WILL take advantage of this.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    2. Re:Solution to security research problem by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      However since they now make it a crime to do the right thing, we resolve to anonymously publish our results for these products to the most vile and wicked cracking gangs we can contact as ready to use fully weaponized exploits. (Emphasis mine)

      Ever the fine line between funny and insightful. I'd call this one the latter. This is precisely(ok I can forget about helping the "vile and wicked cracking gangs") what needs to be done. How many more cases like these do we need before this becomes general practice?? The same applies to those who develope "questionable" programs like P2P, etc. Do it anonymously and stay out of jail. Let's forget about attribution and just get the goods out there. And of course, this proves once AGAIN that IP law is just as effective at censorship as a Chinese rifle.

      --
      What?
    3. Re:Solution to security research problem by Audacious · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They probably won't. They'll just call you terrorists and prosecute you for what you've said. Even though you haven't done anything.

      No - the best thing to do IMHO is to just say that you have found a problem with their product but that due to the litigious nature of the company(ies) you can not explain how the problem comes about nor will you provide any details because you have destroyed all evidence in accordance with the company's wishes that all problems remain just that - unresolved problems. Further, since you have found these problems and could verify that they existed if the company would allow you to do so; you must - in the future - deny any request from the company for information (since you had to destroy it and it is illegal to have such information in your possession) and - you must also, from that day forwards, recommend that this company's products be barred from consideration in future purchases for the university and/or any companies with which you are going to be working with until the problem has been fixed.

      Remember - hit them in their pocketbook. If everyone gangs up against the company and refuses to buy their products and boycotts them, they will go out of business and you won't have to deal with them anymore - or - they will stop trying to enforce rules and regulations which are detrimental to the overall health of the (and their) economy.

      The alternative is for the person to send the information out to every other university in the United States and all of them declare the same findings at the same time so there isn't just one person the company can sue. They would have to sue everyone which makes them a persona non grata in the academic world. The great thing about this idea is that it would definitely draw the attention of the press if such a thing occurred. Which, I believe, is not something any company wants to do. (Be on TV across the nation in a bad light.)

      Just my $0.02 worth. :-)

      PS: Remember - they can't make you perjure yourself in court. So when they ask what you did you just say "I can not answer that under the rules and regulations of the 5th admendment." And if asked to explain you just look at the judge and say it is a catch-22 situation. You are damned if you answer and damned if you do not. Sort of like the Spanish Inquisition where they'd ask questions like "Did you enjoy consorting with the devil the last time you did it?" and then only allow you to answer yes or no. Either answer makes it look as if you enjoyed consorting with the devil at some point.

      --
      Someone put a black hole in my pocket and now I'm broke. :-)
  14. Why Windows Vista Will Suck by heatdeath · · Score: 5, Funny

    For those who don't want to read the entire article, here is the cliffsnote version.

    I understand operating systems and am very smart and I have 20 computers and a dog named spot.

    linux power.

    Vista will suck because it won't be free.

    linux power.

    The graphics will suck because it takes an expensive computer to run Aeroglass.

    linux power.

    Memory management will suck because linux has had good memory management for years.

    linux power.

    Superfetch will suck because GCC has had it for years, and your dog can run off with your USB card. (Never mind that it's just a *cache*, and it won't do anything but slow your computer down again after your dog starts chewing on it)

    linux power.

    TCP/IP improvements will suck because it's been in other OS's for years.

    linux power.

    Security will be bad because they found a bug in vista.

    linux power.

    --
    I'm sorry. The number you have reached is imaginary. Please rotate your phone 90 degrees and try again.
    1. Re:Why Windows Vista Will Suck by paulius_g · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Speaking of "superfetch", arn't most USB storage devices running on flash memory? Flashable memory does tend to stop working after a certain number of flashes. Moving in and out huge ammount of data will seriously shorten the life of these devices.

      Seriously though, I would like Microsoft to improve their caching abbilities using the system's RAM. For now, Windows only has two setting. To cache minimally, or maximally. So what do I do when I got 2GB of RAM, want a run a 300mb application and cache the rest? According to Microsoft, they recommend not to cache because Windows will store that application in the paging file. Talk about stupidity.

      Seriously, if mainstream applications would be ported to Linux, more people would switch.

    2. Re:Why Windows Vista Will Suck by Comen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The original article does not mention anything about a USB drive for Superfetch that I remember.
      Everyone sure that guy didnt just make that up.
      I mean if the system lets you point Superfetch to any drive on the system and you happen to point it to a USB drive then fine, but does it have to be on the USB drive?
      using a USB drive for that seems like a bad really bad idea agreed. But i havent read anything saying that but this guys article, and maybe he set his system up for that or something? but no body told him to or made him do this?

      Curious.

    3. Re:Why Windows Vista Will Suck by compm375 · · Score: 1
      Did you even RTFA??
      You see, with SuperFetch you can a USB 2.0-based flash drive as a fetch buffer between your RAM and your hard disk. Let me spell that out for you. Vista will put part of your running application on a device that can be kicked off, knocked out, or that your dog can carry away as a chew toy. Do you see the problem here? Me too!

      I don't know how you got modded insightful. I personally agree with the grandparent, but it really doesn't matter, because Vista is not out to the public yet and it could really be anything.
    4. Re:Why Windows Vista Will Suck by kepone · · Score: 1

      I fully agree with what you say here. This guy did not have a single valid point, and also his claim of needing a ridiculous machine to run AERO is also incorrect. I have tested every build of vista that has been available so far and I have gotten it to run fine on a p4 1.7ghz machine with 256 mb.. AERO's only requirement is a DX9 video card.. it runs perfectly on a GeForce FX5200.. which you can purchase for about $50.. hardly top of the line. You do not need a monster machine to run vista, not in the slightest. If you have been having problems running vista on your machine ( crashing a lot and etc ), try installing it on an intel based machine.. the only problems I have had so far are on AMD machines, and that seems to be fixed with build 5308 ( which now has built in driver support for n force chipsets ). The Extreme Tech article was well written and well thought out, this guy's rebuttal is based on nothing other than his linux fandom. Yes Linux has had some of these features for a long time, but don't you think that Microsoft should be commended for implementing these features without compromising user friendliness or application support at all? I sure do.

      --
      when you start to doubt yourself, the real world will eat you alive.
  15. Re: Mac Challenge by alien-alien · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I would like to point out that those people who state that MacOS X hacking is of little interest to the hacking community because the Mac has little market presence should pay attention to the draw this challenge precipitated.

    Looks like every hacker and their uncle had a go at this one. I wonder how many unique IP addresses were used to access the challenge.

  16. What a @$#%#$ idiot... by stubear · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read that pile of crap that somone claims to be an article about Why Vista Will Suck and all I got out of it is this guy is a $%@^$@# idiot. Great, he's got a copy of Vista and a fast machine. Most of his complaints can either be dismissed because Vusta is still a BETA or not attributed to Microsoft at all. Is it really Microsoft's fault if you're not careful around your USB drive? And who cares if Linux and Mac OS X have had feature X for years? Isn't Vista going to benefit from using feature X if everyone else has? How can this be a reason why Vista will suck? Isn't this more of a reason why Microsoft's marketing managers suck? What about his anecdotal argument concering security? There was a patch for the WMF swcurity hole. Let's analyze the argument. First of all, the patch was released in January. The CTP was released in February. You do the math. Not to mention that perhaps there was an old portion of XP in the January release of Vista that's since been removed from the February CTP. Did Stephen check? Probably not. If security patches being released for an OS are all the proof he needs that it's insecure than he'd better add OS X and Linux to the list. All in all, this was a poorly written and researched article with little evidence to back up his claims.

  17. Vista will be expensive...? by DogDude · · Score: 1

    Also from that sucky article...

    OK, so the first reason that Vista sucks is that, no matter what version you get, it's likely to be expensive.

    I'm wondering if this guy has ever bought a copy of Windows. They're generally $200. I don't remember any of Widnows desktop OS's *ever* costing much more than $200, actually. Did this guy just pull this out of his ass, or something?

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:Vista will be expensive...? by sqlrob · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And a new computer to support it, at least according to him.

    2. Re:Vista will be expensive...? by mjm1231 · · Score: 1

      While that may not be expensive for some people, in the richest country in the world it represents about 1/3 of the median weekly family income. So, to an awful lot of people, it is expensive.

      --
      Ideology: A tool used primarily to avoid the bother of thinking.
    3. Re:Vista will be expensive...? by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      If I were you, I wouldn't let others here me making comments like that.

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    4. Re:Vista will be expensive...? by DogDude · · Score: 1

      ...you're the grown man playing with penguins...

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    5. Re:Vista will be expensive...? by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      touché!

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
  18. Re:What kind of sentence by brsmith4 · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's not.

    Part 1: Taleyarkhan, who used to work at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, has, since working at Perdue, removed the equipment the co-workers were using to try and replicate the results

    , (comma)

    Part 2: claimed results for experimental runs were positive for fusion despite the co-workers never seeing the raw data

    and (Proper use of a conjunction in a sentence containing a list of verb phrases)

    Part 3: opposed the publication of results which contradicted his findings.

    Each part of this sentence is not a sentence in and of itself (with the exception of part one, which is completely acceptable), which would constitute a run-on sentence. It is grammatically correct even though it is quite surprising and irregular, being the work of a Slashdot editor. This sentence is logically equivalent to:

    Joe, who used to manage Cisco-based networks at Sandia National Labs, has, since completing his dissertation, published papers on network topologies, lectured at various institutions and released software to aid in the management of large-scale networks.

    Sure, its clumsy and difficult to read, but still valid.

  19. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Informative
    I can tell you that most political websites, right or left, are blocked
    I won't dispute your word, but I recall that Rush Limbaugh gets syndicated to the U.S. military's American Forces Radio and Television Service.

    AFAIK, there are no voices giving out any other viewpoint(s).

    You can read an in-depth review of the matter here:
    http://www.petitiononline.com/mmfa2/petition.html
    The petition was created by the people at Media Matters
    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  20. DoD policy=depends on who ya ask! by 1337p1rt3 · · Score: 4, Informative

    "I work in a mobile combat communications unit, while I'm not in the sandbox right now, I can attest to the DoD policy on blocking web access.

    There are several levels of DoD blocking. First, the DoD policy on web access, policy, and security in general, very broad, next is the Departments level, i.e. Army, Navy, etc, then there is the base policy and then the command policy and unit policy all the way down to the company. The "general rule" is that no one can have policy rules lower then that of above. This means a platoons policy can not be more lax then the base policy. This sort of transitive policy based appliance leaves much room for interpretation at all levels of policy implementation. Every service is different, every level is different and every network right down to the hardware is different. So, when you talk about blocking you have to be very specific as it is nearly impossible to just nail down an exact, cut and dry policy. Web content filtering, ACL's and the likes are different from service to service and mission to mission.

    First of all when you are down range don't expect to even get DSL speeds from a satellite, we usually roll with about 256kbs for the data side of our trunk.

    This is too far from the truth depending on the environment. The Ku band in Iraq is quite substantial in fact the smallest direct BGP Sat link might be a T-1 up to 8 and 32Meg or so via a Sat package called the DKET. This is speaking for the Marine side by the way. Also lateral links are about 3Meg at the smallest level via another Ku Sat package. This of course has its caveats. At this level we are talking about a non-mobile infrastructure were as a mobile infrastructure would be a Microware shot thru a TSR or MUX link at anywhere from 96k to 512k or more depending on voice needs and breakdown of classified to unclassified network needs. (Data bandwidth is shared between the two types of DoD networks when multiplexed, voice generally rides its own trunk card thru the multiplexer, typically a Promina node does this multiplexing or at lower levels in the unit they have what is called an FCC multiplexer)

    So blocking sites is very important, otherwise 4 or 5 people could start streaming audio and pretty much knock down any legitimate use of the network. We filter websites with smartfilter and yes the military system admins in the IPO office will unblock any web site that isn't blocked by local policy (no pr0n, no streaming audio, no civilian web mail: both the hot and the g varieties, and no chat programs; although irc is used by the DoD)

    This is somewhat accurate. From the Corps standpoint, when I first went to Iraq this was not the case. We could chat all day long until it was "locked down". This is done at the BGP point via the highest headquarters out there, CentCom etc. Even then it isn't full proof, I found ways around it, i.e. bypass or just good ole bribing the E-3 at the terminal.

    This is no Orwellian conspiracy, but quick and easy system administration; apply smartfilter: check! If you want to check the current smartfilter blocked sites goto: securecomputing and submit some sites to check."

    Once again, take this with a grain of salt. Though this seems like it applies to all agencies and to all services at all times it really doesn't. The mobile and deployed units are in constant flex so nothing is really ever solidified when it comes to policy. The ONLY real way to know for sure is to go out there and site down behind their network and try it yourself, or ask someone you know out there to do it. I have a couple dozen friends out there right now on the Net Admin side so if you have a specific inquiry post it and I will see what I can come up with.

    1. Re:DoD policy=depends on who ya ask! by Red+Warrior · · Score: 1

      And let's not forget the distinction between official networks and MWR internet cafes. The initial article didn't make the distinction, but seemed to be directed at "official network" policies.

      Where I was stationed, the official network's content filters changed over time (at about the time the COSCOM running the base changed) the internet cafes would get you to everything but pr0n for the entire year. Though I understand that different locations have different vendors for the internet cafes - all the way from unit-run to contracted by 3rd parties.

      --
      "If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone."
      ~Epictetus
  21. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Digg.com is eating slashdot alive right now. Better stories, better tech, better forum. It's only a matter of time slashdot becomes irrelevant unless they can turn it around."

    I really hope a lot of people leave Slashdot for Digg because the only people that read Digg are complete and utter morons. The intelligent people have already realized that Digg is complete garbage and the idiots that are to stupid to understand that can flock to the idiocy that is Digg. It only makes the community here better by filtering out some of the morons. Digg reminds me of an AOL chat room that is filled with nothing but below average script kiddies...

    Digg is the perfect example of what's wrong with all this "Web 2.0" garbage. Flashy website that's incredibly bloated with no real content and a horribly dumb community.

  22. Parent is right. by marcello_dl · · Score: 3, Interesting

    those people who state that MacOS X hacking is of little interest to the hacking community because the Mac has little market presence should pay attention to the draw this challenge precipitated.

    I completely agree with you. a 4,5% share seems low but many hackers would get a terrific ego boost by being able to shut up once for all the mac fanboys. Also some attacks on windows rely on unpatched machines with this and that service running and reachable through firewalls, which could well mean an attack on the 10% or less of the total of windows machines which in turns makes like an 8-6% or even less share. Crackers still take time to engineer them, though.

    Mod parent up, please.

    --
    ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
  23. Re:DesktopLinux? by Krach42 · · Score: 1

    I don't need some reviewer to tell me why I won't like Vista. I can get my hands on it, but I still don't use it at home. Why? Because no matter how much they change, it's still Windows, and I'm a *nix man.

    Plus, Windows XP is already painfully slow to interact with already, I don't need it to be any worse.

    Oh, also those nice lovely aero glass windows? It makes it REALLY hard to just at a glance spot which window is active, and which is not.

    So, I don't care about reviews. At some point, I'll have to use Vista at work, but I'll never be using it at home.

    --

    I am unamerican, and proud of it!
  24. Re:Wise. by Comen · · Score: 1

    I'll secound that! Thats a pretty weak article.

  25. myspace by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We're going to be suggesting some very specific measures that MySpace can take based on our conversations with MySpace as well as with other law enforcement authorities at the state and local levels.

    Not sure what the point of this article is, he doesn't even say what his "specific measures" are. Probably just some political move.

    I don't know what the big deal is about myspace, just politician noise, I guess. What kind of 14 year old girl is going to go out with a 30 year old man? If they do, there is probably some other problem (like they are starved for affection). I remember here on slashdot a few years ago there was a story about a girl who got seduced by a predator, but her mother was encouraging it!

    So yeah, there is a problem here, but making laws about myspace isn't going to help anything.

    --
    Qxe4
    1. Re:myspace by BoneFlower · · Score: 1

      "politician noise"

      You've about summed up Richard Blumenthal.

      I'm not entirely sure what his game is. He doesn't do a horrible job as AG, but his statements to the media sound like total BS gloryhounding, saying it to make people love him rather than that he actually intends to do something about it.

      I'm pretty sure he's targeting a run for some office in the near future. Exactly what I'm not sure. Probably either Congress or the Governors office. He'll have a fight on his hands if he takes on Mama Rell though, for Rell to have come out from under Rowland without anything sticking to her, she's a formidable politician even if she really was totally unawares.

  26. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Digg is the perfect example of what's wrong with all this "Web 2.0" garbage. Flashy website that's incredibly bloated with no real content and a horribly dumb community.

    As opposed to slashdot: clunky website that's incredibly bloated with no real content and a horribly dumb community. Digg doesn't put up with shit from Zonk, **BeatlesBeatles or Roland Piqueeiellee; that says a lot. If it weren't for the trolls, I wouldn't read slashdot.

  27. UTF by jd · · Score: 1
    I dislike UTF with a passion - it wasn't designed correctly in the first place and all subsequent versions (we're up to Unicode 5.0.0 beta2) are hacks to supplement deficiencies that should never have been allowed in in the first place.


    Having said that, if we're going to use UTF, we might as well use it right. Otherwise, it is going to be an agonizing pain every time we have to step up a version. DNS issues, alone, will preclude frequent updates from a half-hearted update. For this reason, it would seem stupid to use UTF-8 or UTF-16. Those don't encode everything that need to be encoded, if we're to have a truly international system.


    Based on the current definitions, we should be looking at UTF-32, BOM and version 5 of the Unicode specification. The Unicode FAQ talks a lot about how nobody needs more character sets than UTF-16 can support, but (a) they don't represent all languages, or even a reasonable set, because UTF-16 can't handle that many, (b) only the criminally insane don't provide room for inevitable expansion, and (c) DNS is far more constrained by efficient processing and reliability than by bandwidth, and UTF-32 is described by Unicode themselves as faster and simpler.


    The problem with Unicode internationalization is that there are multiple ways of defining what is effectively the same character, which means that users will not be able to differentiate between strings the computer regards as different. This is important, when dealing with copyright, phishing, cybersquatting, etc.


    (Unicode is also very poor at handling character sets that can't fit into a single block, is very inefficient - only the first 21 bits of a 32-bit UTF are meaningful according to Unicode, and is an encoding for a whole glyph - which means that it will make meaningless distinctions and won't make sensible relationships.)


    The first step to true Internationalization is to burn the Unicode specification and replace it with something cohesive, extensible and logical. The second step is to have standard hardware work on the unit size directly, so that anything that logically worked fine with bytes on byte-based hardware will logically work fine UNMODIFIED on the new units, totally transparently. The encumbrance of UTF decoding doesn't make it any easier to use. Transparency is the key to universality.


    (If I can't use the new encoding on an early copy of Mosaic, if I can't load the text file into a standard text editor and edit it directly, if I need vast numbers of supplementary libraries and conversion charts to get it to work, then it's not transparent and adoption is going to be a real pain. Updates are a headache for programmer and user alike.)

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:UTF by Haeleth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For this reason, it would seem stupid to use UTF-8 or UTF-16. Those don't encode everything that need to be encoded, if we're to have a truly international system.
      Based on the current definitions, we should be looking at UTF-32...
      The Unicode FAQ talks a lot about how nobody needs more character sets than UTF-16 can support, but (a) they don't represent all languages, or even a reasonable set, because UTF-16 can't handle that many...


      With due respect, you clearly don't know what you're talking about.

      UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32 encode exactly the same characters. There is no character that can be encoded in UTF-32 that cannot be represented in UTF-16 or UTF-8. And there is no character that is needed to write any text in the world that would not fit into the range of characters that Unicode allows for. Period.

      Moreover, the efficiency implications of decoding UTF-16 surrogate pairs or long UTF-8 sequences are hugely overblown. Yes, UTF-8 and UTF-16 are variable-length encodings, but in practice that is totally irrelevant. Even UTF-32 represents many logical characters as multi-codepoint sequences, with things like combining diacritics. The complexity of processing things like Arabic text, which is full of ligatures and positional glyph variants, dwarfs the perceived complexity of performing a few bit shifts to convert three or four UTF-8 bytes into a Unicode codepoint.

      In the nicest possible way, please go and learn about how these things really work before you come back and mouth off about things you don't fully understand.

  28. Shhhh! by SEWilco · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The bottom line is this means that it is forbidden to use reverse engineering tools to find bugs in a software.

    "Why Windows Vista won't be known to suck."

  29. Re:Vista will be expensive...? YES by NetNifty · · Score: 1

    Staples in the UK sell XP Pro for £209.99, which is ~$360. Ok it's not the cheapest your going to find, and OEM versions are about half that price, but it's still a significant amount for an operating system, especially when compared to the Free alternatives.

  30. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by this+great+guy · · Score: 1
    I don't bitch at my friends for not letting me fuck their wives when I come to visit their houses.

    Don't ask. Just do it :)

  31. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by DAldredge · · Score: 3, Informative

    1700 PACIFIC U.S. MON - FRI TOP
    00:00 AP Newscast
    03:00 Sporting News Radio Sports
    06:00 The Al Franken Show

  32. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

    Gives a new meaning to "Don't ask, don't tell."

  33. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by causality · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The sad fact is that there is a vast left-wing conspiracy in the media to bury stories that are unfavorable to their political viewpoint. Liberals don't want to hear truth. Stories from soldiers in Iraq are positive, but lefties watching CNN all day only want to hear bad news so they can feel good about hating Bush some more.

    It's not about left-wing or right-wing or centrist or any of that. It's about money and power just as it has always been. Play the follow-the-money game (and hone some research skills too, woohoo!) more often and you will come to see this.
    Left, right today. God, Satan yesterday. You notice it's always two, and only two, diametrically opposed ideas that can be compromised but cannot be reconciled (with other ideas existing only in an extremely marginalized form that is unlikely to be implemented, such as libertarianism). Your basic divide-and-conquer strategy. The left-wing vs. right-wing is an idealistic clash that does a great job of distracting people from basic critical thinking skills and a willingness to stick to the facts as determined by evidence when making decisions. It's a distraction, and it's a deliberate and effective one.

    I'll give an example. Generally a left-winger is for greater personal freedom and more economic restrictions (particularly income redistribution, but there are others). Generally a right-winger is for greater economic freedom (tax cuts and the like) but more restrictions on personal freedom. Well, guess what? Both require a rather large government to properly realize their stated goals. So you have everyone squabbling over which set of restrictions they prefer, meanwhile, the elected officials continue to enjoy an ever-increasing national budget and more and more laws to appease their campaign contributors (recent changes to copyright law, anyone?). No matter how you carry out the left vs. right debate, a minimal government will never be the result. As stated above, a very effective distraction. For the people who stand to gain from less real freedom, and this subset of the population includes the major media outlets, it has served its purpose well. You don't need a conspiracy of any sort either; all that is required is that those who desire power act in their own interests while no one does anything to check them because they're too concerned about who will win the next American Idol.

    It has always amazed me how so many people would agree that throughout history, religion has been used to control people by keeping them ignorant and willing to obey, but the same folks who will agree with that find it absurd that media and propaganda and creature comforts and an overemphasis on work/business can be used the same way.
    --
    It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
  34. There is no AT&T by fm6 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Nowadays, I have a moment of weirdness whenever I see a headline about what AT&T is up to. I still think of it as SBC, which was once part of the original AT&T, but has now morphed into something completely different.

    The "real" AT&T, pathetic as it was in the last couple of decades of its existence, had a long and interesting history, dating to the 1870s. There's something profoundly phony about a company like SBC claiming to be a continuation of that.

    1. Re:There is no AT&T by portscan · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with you that AT&T is dead, but the amusing thing is that between SBC, BellSouth, Ameritech, AT&T Wireless, AT&T, and I don't know what else they have a large portion of the former AT&T Corporation that was broken up for antitrust reasons.

    2. Re:There is no AT&T by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

      I totally agree that there is something phony about SBC masquerading as AT&T. If it makes you feel any better, USA Today ran a large article in the business section on March 8 about the proposed merger of AT&T and BellSouth. Some market analysts have described this as "a merger out of weakness". AT&T has massive debt and they are going to have even more after getting BellSouth. Some feel that this acquisition does nothing to address the fact that their successful cell phone business can't keep the entire company afloat and they have nothing else that looks like a revenue producer. I live in Bell South's region and I am seeing more and more people switch their phone service to VOIP providers like Vonage and even cable companies, so business may not be as great for the new AT&T as they hope.

    3. Re:There is no AT&T by erin_61777 · · Score: 1

      SBC's history is just as rich as at&t's. They were a part of the original "Bell" system. The new at&t is made up of SBC, Pacific Bell, Ameritech, SNET, at&t and now BellSouth. Pacific Bell, Ameritech and BellSouth were also all original big "Bell" members. I don't think that they are being phony. They're doing what makes sense, by going by the most recognizable brand name. Everyone knows who at&t is. The name at&t has more of an impact than SBC. It is true that traditional phone lines are no longer the bread and butter of the phone company. Phone companies are still subject to federal and local regulations that cable companies and VOIP companies are not. They are required to share their networks with thier competition at (often times) below cost. With so many people using cell phones and VOIP as their primary lines, the company realizes that the real money is going to come out of business, HSIA, and "total packages". You're going to see a lot more telephony companies trying to deliver what's called the "triple play" packages. They're trying to offer HSIA & TV integrated with phone service including POTS and VOIP.

    4. Re:There is no AT&T by fm6 · · Score: 1
      Which is a sign of the times. When AT&T was broken up, the federal government took the antitrust laws seriously. The current in-crowd considers them a simple nuisance.

      To be fair, a lot of the vertical integration in the phone system is history. You no longer are forced to lease your premises equipment (even at home!) from the phone company. Plus AT&T's former hardware operation, Lucent, is forced to compete for Central Office equipment sales. Ironically, their biggest competitor is Nortel, which used to be the hardware company for AT&T's Canadian opeation.

    5. Re:There is no AT&T by rsadelle · · Score: 1

      Here's what I find weirdest about it: They have this huge advertising campaign (billboards, TV commercials, inserts with my bill, AT&T logo on the bill) about how they're now AT&T, but they still want the check sent to SBC.

    6. Re:There is no AT&T by fm6 · · Score: 1

      The rebranding effort is obviously running way ahead of the actual reorgnization. Which is pretty typical.

  35. Re:What kind of sentence by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

    Thank you for parsing the sentence that I wrote. I wasn't sure if I should have divided what I wanted to say into two different sentences or go for the gusto. Obviously I went for the latter. I've been working hard of late to correctly use commas to add pauses to long-winded sentences such as the one in question.

    In this case it was me and not ScuttleMonkey who wrote the sentence. For once the editors are not to blame.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
  36. fucking hell by BoneFlower · · Score: 1

    Blumenthal mentioned on Slashdot.

    Well, to anyone reading this not familiar with the state AG, he's basically glory hound. I am pretty skeptical of anything he says... things just look like he wants his name mentioned everywhere.

    Granted, he does an ok job as AG, but that often seems to be secondary to the blatant glory hounding that infects everything he says to the media.

  37. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by Mistshadow2k4 · · Score: 1, Informative

    The fact that this piece of flamebait trolling got modded up shows exactly the one way Digg is superior to /. - no idiot mods. On Digg, the moderation now works by voting so the registered readers as a whole mod, not just a select few.

    Don't think I'm bitching because I don't have mod points; I used my last earlier today and I've lost count of how many times I've received mod points. I meta-mod almost every day too. Yes, someone who mods is saying how much the mod system sucks! But I see this kind of crap here all the time and it's getting to where it just makes me sick. Trolls get modded up by those who agree with them and good posts modded down because the mod disagrees with the poster or was too dumb to understand the joke (or perhaps was simply a humorless jerk). THIS is what /. has to be embarassed aobut, more than anything else. How do you think a newcomer reacts when he sees some bigoted troll flaming a certain group of people modded up to +2 or even higher while insightful and genuinely funny posts are modded down?

    Oh, by the way, you're an arrogant asshole. There, maybe now that I've flamed someone this post will get modded up too.

    --
    I dream of a better world... one in which chickens can cross roads without their motives being questioned.
  38. Re:DesktopLinux? by Total_Wimp · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'm glad to see I wasn't the only one who had a problem with this article. It's one of the most poorly reasoned evaluation of software I have ever personally seen. The article is best summed up by these two paragraphs near the end:
    The folks from ExtremeTech also like the fact that Vista will have many more built-in applications. Isn't this why Microsoft got into trouble with the Department of Justice a while back? Isn't this the kind of thing that has both South Korea and the European Union raking them over the coals? Why, yes. Yes, it is.

    Be that as it may, as I sit here looking at my SUSE 10 Linux desktop, I can't help but notice that I have, for free, every software application I could ever want. Advantage: Linux.
    In the first paragraph he blasts Microsoft for bundling apps. In the second he praises his Linux distro for bundling so many more. Based on this kind of evaluation, Vista literally can't win.

    But even earlier in the article he blasts windows for supporting peripherals that do not yet exist. DirectX10 graphic cards and CableCard support both get dismissed because you can't buy them yet (just as you can't buy Vista). Once again, how can Microsoft possibly fix this; by not providing support for this hardware?

    Finally, now that Microsoft can't win by adding software or hardware support, Microsoft can't win by adding features. The guy has dug deep to find a little-advertised networking feature that lets you use ipsec for internal communications. He declares this to be bad. He fails to tell you that you are neither required, nor coerced to use this feature. He fails to mention that you will probably not even know it exists unless A) you run a corporate network and B) you dig deep into the OS to find it. My mind is completely numb trying to comprehend how MS is screwing the customer here. Once again, should they have just left the option out?

    This guy hasn't merely set the bar too high for Vista, he's replaced the bar with a sign that says, "still too low." This is only worth reading as a reminder that people who support the right thing are more than capable of doing it in the wrong way.

    TW
  39. smartfilter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    This is no Orwellian conspiracy, but quick and easy system administration; apply smartfilter: check!

    Well, then the issue is the contents of the block list. According to a guy behind the filter:

    • Wonkette - "Forbidden, this page is categorized as: Forum/Bulletin Boards, Politics/Opinion."
    • Bill O'Reilly (www.billoreilly.com) - OK
    • Air America (www.airamericaradio.com) - "Forbidden, this page is categorized as: Internet Radio/TV, Politics/Opinion."
    • Rush Limbaugh (www.rushlimbaugh.com) - OK
    • ABC News "The Note" - OK
    • Website of the Al Franken Show (www.alfrankenshow.com) - "Forbidden, this page is categorized as: Internet Radio/TV, Politics/Opinion."
    • G. Gordon Liddy Show (www.liddyshow.us) - OK
    • Don & Mike Show (www.donandmikewebsite.com) - "Forbidden, this page is categorized as: Profanity, Entertainment/Recreation/Hobbies."
    1. Re:smartfilter by Sepodati · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, according to another guy behind the filter (me), every one of those sites comes up.

      Like someone else said above, the policies are applied differently across the services and down to the different levels. rushlimbaugh.com proabably isn't blocked because NO ONE F'N GOES THERE and no bandwidth is being wasted on it. If a flood of users went there and started eating up / wasting bandwidth, then it's be blocked for operation reasons because the site is not mission essential.

      You know, just _maybe_ there is someone pushing a political agenda here. I can't say for sure that there's not. But this isn't a "DOD" or "Marine" policy to block these sites. Every situation and site is different and what happens at one shouldn't be lumped with the entire DOD.

      ---John Holmes...

    2. Re:smartfilter by etymxris · · Score: 1

      That's not what I get when I put those URLs in the form provided. Of course, it's possible someone in the military is customizing the filter. What I get:

      URL1: HTTP://WWW.BILLOREILLY.COM
      V4 - Entertainment/Recreation/Hobbies, Politics/Opinion
      3.x Premier - Entertainment, Politics/Religion

      URL2: HTTP://WWW.AIRAMERICARADIO.COM
      V4 - General News
      3.x Premier - Gen. News

      URL3: HTTP://WWW.RUSHLIMBAUGH.COM
      V4 - Politics/Opinion
      3.x Premier - Politics/Religion

      URL4: HTTP://WWW.ALFRANKENSHOW.COM
      V4 - Not Categorized
      3.x Premier - Not Categorized

      URL5: HTTP://WWW.LIDDYSHOW.US
      V4 - Provocative Attire, Politics/Opinion, Weapons
      3.x Premier - Politics/Religion, Mature

      URL1: HTTP://WWW.DONANDMIKEWEBSITE.COM
      V4 - Entertainment/Recreation/Hobbies, Profanity
      3.x Premier - Entertainment, Mature

  40. Re: Mac Challenge by Xochil · · Score: 1

    My take on it as it was a test a member of the IT staff came up with and implemented on his/her own without knowledge or approval of IT management. It probably didn't take long for the network people at wisc.edu to notice the bandwidth spikes and identify the cause.

    His heart was in the right place, but I hope he doesn't get fired.

  41. Re:What kind of sentence by Matrix14 · · Score: 1

    Obviously a submission to the Trent Reznor Award for Complicated Sentences.

  42. Re: Mac Challenge by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    My take on it as it was a test a member of the IT staff came up with and implemented on his/her own without knowledge or approval of IT management. It probably didn't take long for the network people at wisc.edu to notice the bandwidth spikes and identify the cause.

    So isn't that a success? They've basically proven that DoSsing a site that's administered by someone else is a quick way of taking it down.

  43. Re:DesktopLinux? by beholder77 · · Score: 1

    Hmm, seems fishy that the article is this bad. Maybe it's actually written by a MS shill to evoke this kind of reaction from both the microsoft and linux community.

    --
    Success is as dangerous as failure, hope as hollow as fear.
  44. Why Windows Vista Really Will Suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Agreed. The guy should have focused on why Vista really will suck.

    1. Vista will suck because it will wrap your media files in DRM.
    2. Vista will suck because it will deliberately hamper your attempts to use non-Microsoft search engines and music distributors.
    3. Vista will suck because it will phone home and report on the user.
    4. Vista will suck because it will require you to report in with Microsoft before you can use it.
    5. Vista will suck because it will require you to report in with Microsoft when you upgrade your machine.
    6. Vista will suck because after you have spent a good chunk of change on it, it will bar you from excersicing your right to resell it.
    7. Vista will suck because it will come with a 20 page End User License Agreement (EULA) that nobody understands.
    8. Vista will suck because after you decline to agree to the EULA and attempt to seek a refund, as the license agreement says you can, the place that sold you the product will refuse to refund your money.
    9. Vista will suck because it will require you to manually run a separate installer to add drivers for each piece of hardware you hook up to the machine.
    10. Vista will suck because it will pop up a warning for every driver that Microsoft hasn't approved.
    11. Vista will suck because vendors that don't bend over backwards and do what Microsoft wants will face a competitive disadvantage in the marketplace. Thus vendors will either comply with Microsoft's demands (for example, refuse to publish specs to write open source drivers), face a greatly diminished market share, or go out of business completely.
    12. Vista will suck because it will add another set of APIs and document formats to lock in customers.
    13. Vista will suck because the DRM system will be designed specifically to prevent Windows software from running under WINE or any other Windows replacement.
    14. Vista will suck because it will disable key features when used on a non-Microsoft virtual machine.
    15. Vista will suck because it will intentially disable key features (the ability to play DVDs or other DRM'd media files) when it can't phone home and verify that the clock is set correctly. Thus leading to planned obsolecense.
    16. Vista will suck because purchasing it will require giving money to a crooked company.

    And those are a few of the reasons Vista will suck.

  45. USB and SuperFetch by bastianmz · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are two Vista concepts at play here, SuperFetch and External Memory Devices (EMDs).

    "Windows Vista introduces a new concept in adding memory to a system. USB flash drives can be used as External Memory Devices (EMDs) to extend system memory and improve performance without opening the box. Your computer is able to access memory from an EMD device much more quickly than it can access data on the hard drive, boosting system performance. When combined with SuperFetch technology, this can help drive impressive improvement in system responsiveness."

    http://www.microsoft.com/windowsvista/features/for everyone/performance.mspx

    SuperFetch can apparently use an EMD as additional ram and "A unique algorithm optimizes wear patterns, so that a USB device can run as an EMD for many years, even when heavily used.". I think that I'd take it with a grain of salt until I saw it working, this is still marketing fluff as the USB support won't be available until a later preview version of Vista (http://www.itnews.com.au/newsstory.aspx?CIaNID=20 100).

    I am curious about the Hybrid Hard Drives mentioned in the article on the Microsoft site. Anyone know which manufacturers are developing hard drives with a large flash cache?

  46. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by TubeSteak · · Score: 1
    I stand corrected.

    Looks like the noise over Rush made a difference
    http://myafn.dodmedia.osd.mil/radio/afn/schedule.a sp
    If you want to check for yourself.

    However, if you go back to the articles that started it all http://wonkette.com/politics/wonkette/our-boys-nee d-gossip-158687.php You'll see
    Rush Limbaugh (www.rushlimbaugh.com) - OK

    Website of the Al Franken Show (www.alfrankenshow.com) - "Forbidden, this page (http://www.airamericaradio.com/) is categorized as: Internet Radio/TV, Politics/Opinion."
    I guess he has streaming audio and Rush doesn't?
    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  47. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by Haertchen · · Score: 1

    "greater personal freedom and more economic restrictions (particularly income redistribution, but there are others)"

    ???

    Small business owners probably see those two stated goals as completely incompatible, especially the income redistribution.

    You can't have your cake and eat it too.

  48. No conspiracy theory neccessary here... by bloggins02 · · Score: 2, Informative

    While I'm as big a fan of conspiracy theories as the next guy, I'm sorry to say that no such speculation is neccessary in this case.

    The guy just cannot write.

    Seriously, check out Linux Desktop or Linux Watch and check out other articles by this guy (his name is Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols). It's all the same story: flawed, simpleton logic; egregious typos (he must hate copy editors, because he's obviously never let one near one of his articles); sentences so poorly constructed that although you know you're reading English you can't figure out for the life of you what the guy is saying.

    Even when he's not that bad, he's bad...

    DSL, for those of you who don't know it, is one of several "mini-Linux" distributions. Of the set, it's probably the most well thought of since it actually manages to pick a GUI into its goodness and, having turned version 2.0 recently, it's the most mature of the mini-Linuxes.

    See, he's just a bit off-kilter; it's not that you can't parse the sentence, it just gives you that queezy feeling in your stomach that you can't explain. I don't know where this guy learned to write, but I can tell you that I won't be reading any more of his "articles."

  49. Rush uses Akamai by Derling+Whirvish · · Score: 1
    I guess he [Al Franken] has streaming audio and Rush [Limbaugh] doesn't?

    That's correct. Rush's audio is streamed from akamai.com's servers which are blocked.

  50. ^BUMP^ by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

    Hopefully someone will come along and mod up your post.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  51. Why Windows Vista will suck by rjdohnert · · Score: 1

    I put up my own rebuttal for that article when it was released

    http://rjdohnert.blogspot.com/2006/03/why-windows- vista-will-suck.html

  52. ^BUMP^ by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

    http://www.akamai.com/en/html/about/press/press514 .html

    I guess Rush made a smart choice in going with akamai. I doubt many blogs will bother to connect those dots and will instead run with the "omg teh mil1t4ry is t3h republican!!11"

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  53. A better summary. by twitter · · Score: 1
    The author himself offers a summary that's worth while:

    I really don't see a thing, not one single thing, that will make the still undelivered Vista significantly better than the Linux or the Mac OS X desktops I have in front of me today.

    Message: you can pay more to get less.

    This is a surprising message from anyone at Ziff Davis, much less a senior editor. It's the first sensible thing I've read from them in years.

    He's run Vista and thinks it sucks because it has all the old crufty problems M$ is infamous for, despite a few superficial improvements. Have you done as much? It ate his biggest and best dual core 3GHz monster and will cost the average person thousands of dollars in hardware and software if they try to upgrade the M$ way. What are you willing to sacrifice

    If you want suck, look at your own boring little sneer. Microsoft really needs to hire some better joke writers.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  54. Reporting bugs illegal? by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1
    I can understand why you shouldn't go posting a few "dozens" of copyrighted bytes... though I don't agree with the runaway copyright system that allows stuff to remain copyright protected for years after it's obsolete. Copyright should be as it once was, a temporary system that expires after, say, 20 years, so that old software and other works will enter the public domain as it once was.

    But that's a subject for another post. In the meantime, I think it's preposterous to stop people from reporting bugs. It's freedom of speech, as far as I'm concerned, and it should also be your right to use reverse engineering tools to uncover bugs and to report those bugs to the world at large. Otherwise, there is a huge imbalance of power in complete favor of the program writer and in complete unfavor to the entire population that uses that program.

    1. Re:Reporting bugs illegal? by David+Chappell · · Score: 1
      I can understand why you shouldn't go posting a few "dozens" of copyrighted bytes... though I don't agree with the runaway copyright system that allows stuff to remain copyright protected for years after it's obsolete.

      Why exactly shoud one not post a few dozen copyrighted bytes? This is clasic fair use and firmly in legal territory. Every time a book reviewer quotes a passage from a book he is copying a few dozen copyrighted words. Every time a TV movie review shows a clip from a movie they are copying a piece of a copyrighted work. I have just copied a few dozen of your copyrighted words in order to comment on them. None of these acticties requires the permission of the copyright holder. Nor does the copyright holder have the power to forbid it. This right of fair use is a cornerstone of free speach. Simply put, it is impossible to meaningfully and convincingly discuss a copyright protected work without quoting from it directly.

      As represented here on Slashdot, this researcher published an article in which he quoted a passage from a copyright protected program and proceded to comment on it in detail. If this isn't fair use, nothing is. If the copyright holders convinced the court otherwise, they could only have done so by confusing the court as to the facts.

    2. Re:Reporting bugs illegal? by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1
      I have just copied a few dozen of your copyrighted words in order to comment on them.

      I will have my legal department send you a cease and desist letter immediately, for the infringing use of the few dozen of my copyrighted words. Please have your legal department send me a similar letter for my above use of your few dozen copyrighted words.

  55. I think you missed the point. by twitter · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Great, he's got a copy of Vista and a fast machine. Most of his complaints can either be dismissed because Vista is still a BETA or not attributed to Microsoft at all. ... And who cares if Linux and Mac OS X have had feature X for years?

    Let me get his point across for you:

    I really don't see a thing, not one single thing, that will make the still undelivered Vista significantly better than the Linux or the Mac OS X desktops I have in front of me today.

    You know they want to give him the best they have, but it did not live up to the competition, much less they hype. If you own a computer go get things done, you can get those things done with far less money. You can even do it with "beta" versions of free software, like Debian Etch or Sid, which do not hog up 6 GHz of processor or 850 MB of RAM on idle, but do offer every feature a user could want.

    Five years ago, XP offered the world a pretty good reason to leave the Microsoft world. Indeed, until a year or two ago, the majority of people on Microsoft had not yet moved to XP, despite it being the default install on every Major brand of computer sold. Sales of Vista are going to be much worse because the hardware suck is so much greater.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:I think you missed the point. by stubear · · Score: 1

      "I really don't see a thing, not one single thing, that will make the still undelivered Vista significantly better than the Linux or the Mac OS X desktops I have in front of me today."

      He forgot one thing. Perhaps Vista will be significantly better than Windows XP adn this may be reason enough for some to upgrade. He never said it was worse than those OSes (other than his comments about a beta version of an OS). However, does it have to be significantly better than Linux or OS X? What if it's marginally better and someone has the option top buy OS X and Mac hardware or Windows Vista and a Dell box? Perhaps the lure of having access to a wide library of hardware and applications is enough to tip people towards Vista. Maybe, gasp, this fictional person everyone loves to talk about prefers the way Windows does things. I use OS X at work and Windows XP at home and I find Windows to be more comfortable to work in. OS X does what every Apple OS has done since the dawn of time, it works well until you stray from the Apple way of doing things. I don't dislike it but I don't like some of the limitations Apple puts in place.

  56. Vista will suck, really? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ok, I don't agree with the 'counter' article on why Vista will suck, as we have also been using it, and there are some rough edges, but even at this beta point it is more stable and mature than some other 'full scale' shipping OSes.

    However, I had to go WTH when I read the article. How can anyone here in the /. community truly use this article as a 'definitive' answer of what Vista will or won't do.

    #1) The person writing the article doesn't even have a video card that does Vista Glass, that means, they don't have a video Card made in the last 4 years, all it takes is a Pixel Shader 2.0 on the card, that NVidia debuted years ago at Comdex with the GeforceFX 5200 for 80 bucks.

    #2) Did anyone else catch this line about his reference to the Vista video requirements, " would only add that if you expect to see the fancy desktop, you need to invest in, say, an ATI Radeon XPress 200, an Nvidia nForce4, or a high-end graphics card."

    Ok, hold your hand up if you know the difference between Video and Mainboard chipsets? nForce/Geforce anyone? I know 10 year olds that would laugh at this. And the ATI Radeon Xpress 200 as a base line? An integrated ATI Chipset that debuted last year? That is even crazy.

    How about an NVidia PCI 5200 Graphics card made several years ago as the baseline, and Vista does Glass quite well on it even. Even generic notebooks baseline for Video anymore is ATI or Nvidia chipsets that include Pixel Shader 2.0 technology or basically hardware DirectX 9 support as others would call it.

    I don't fully disagree with this person's article either, but really, is this /. quality? And yes, that is kind of a loaded question as some of the stuff we see is questionable anyway.

    Make your own judgements on this, even as the article says, Vista seems to be better than XP, and who knows for sure how it will turn out...

  57. Re:What kind of sentence by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    In this case it was me and not ScuttleMonkey who wrote the sentence. For once the editors are not to blame.

    He should have noticed you misspelled "Purdue". (Just joking, I'd be disappointed if my 8-year-old daughter's English skills were as poor as his.)

  58. Re: Mac Challenge by Jerry+Smith · · Score: 1
    So isn't that a success? They've basically proven that DoSsing a site that's administered by someone else is a quick way of taking it down.

    I'm afraid I can't agree with you.Breaking OSX Security was the challenge, not "how to make it possible to win the contest by making the other one impossible to win or even compete".
    Example: let's say two persons had a contest: who was the most intelligent. And say 5 minutes before the contest started, person A shot person B in the head, several times. It would be a bit ridiculous to claim that person A won, wouldn't it.

    --
    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
  59. Re:What kind of sentence by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

    In other words, quite similar to German sentences. Nothing in the language prevents shorter ones, but Germans sure love making page-long sentences!

  60. Re: Mac Challenge by Lars+T. · · Score: 3, Funny
    Well, if you want to take down a machine, you can also submit a story linking to it on Slashdot - doesn't make you a 1337 h4x0r even if it works.

    Oh yes, and: "The challenge is as follows: simply alter the web page on this machine, test.doit.wisc.edu (128.104.16.150)." Not DOS it or other machines around it.

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  61. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by Jay+Carlson · · Score: 2, Informative

    Normally I read digg entirely by RSS. Predictably, if you want any content, they want you to click through, since they haven't figured out how to transfer their ad-serving tech to RSS.

    Recently, I *did* click through to something sufficiently enticing, and started reading. Woah.

    They suddenly have nesting discussions (ok, only 2-level), comment rating, *and* filtering based on aggregate rating. As far as I can tell, they're only a few weeks away from the full-grown trolling ecology that is slashdot.

    Don't think I'm just dissing slashdot. You should consider that this very message is pandering to you. It's a troll, albeit a troll with actual content. Despite my ph33rsom3 50 karma, I just can't resist writing a message that's informative and trying to get a good audience response.

    Before you write off digg as a bunch of fucking loser teenagers who wouldn't know a VAX if somebody dropped it on their WRX (admittedly true), you should consider that they just grabbed what are probably the two most important feature from slashdot for fostering a culture encouraging intelligent commentary.

    Meanwhile, slashcode in response picks up its first new features in *ages*.

    Competition is goooooooooood.

  62. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by VON-MAN · · Score: 1
    True, and that's probably why US media is worldwide known for its far left, even communist slant...

    ...in that weird parallel world you live in.

  63. Re: Mac Challenge by dreamer-of-rules · · Score: 1

    Great analogy! You're like a.. like a SHARK! :)

    --
    Everyone is entitled to his own opinions, but not his own facts.
  64. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    I checked, and Rush doesn't seem to offer audio streams - all the links say video... ;-)

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  65. DOD web filtering? by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

    Well, Did anyone notice which Day of Defeat servers they are going to be filtering? I have specific servers I have to be able to connect to on a regular bases...

  66. Re: Mac Challenge by Jerry+Smith · · Score: 1

    Eerm, thank you? All I meant was: the end doesn't justify the means (not in this case anyway, or in my analogys'). Now, where's that coffee I made...

    --
    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
  67. Re:What kind of sentence by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2, Interesting
    It's not that complicated a sentence. While I realise that corporate suitspeak and that despicable Microsoft grammar checker exhort us to use baby-talk sentences ("This is Spot. See Spot run."), there's nothing that says we have to listen to them.

    I could go on at great length about the iniquity of PowerPointisation of the English language, but I won't. Suffice to say that we should not have to assume that our audience has the attention span of a flea.

  68. Thai TLDs by Rocketship+Underpant · · Score: 1

    If I'm not mistaken, there's also a big company in Thailand with its own Thai-script domain server, so Thai speakers can use familiar words and letters in website domain names. I assume it uses Unicode, but I'm not certain.

    --
    He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
  69. Re:Are Slashdot Editors embarrassed yet? by mfrank · · Score: 1

    You don't have to be a small business owner to see that those goals are incompatible. You just have to not be a moron. Of course, anyone who thinks the Republicans are currently providing greater economic freedoms than the Democrats isn't too bright either.

  70. OEM by darthservo · · Score: 1

    Buy a stick of RAM, or a DVD burner, and get the OEM version. Half the price. Why does a normal user need retail?

    --

    Prove it.

  71. not an OSX test by Gyorg_Lavode · · Score: 1

    This really wasn't an OSX test. It was an apache/ssh test. In fact, it was a test of 2 of the most hardened piece of software in use. We just had an article about how apache had signifigantly lower defects/ksloc than other source that Homeland Security had evaluated. Almost any updated OS with only apache and ssh showing is going to be rock solid assuming the apache install is simple and both are configured correctly.

    --
    I do security
  72. Re: Mac Challenge by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    Example: let's say two persons had a contest: who was the most intelligent. And say 5 minutes before the contest started, person A shot person B in the head, several times. It would be a bit ridiculous to claim that person A won, wouldn't it.

    Well, not quite, but if you asked something like which person is worth more, and instead of trying to prove his abilities he just shot the other guy, then yes, he is now worth more.

    (Except for the minor quibble that murderers have negative worth.)

  73. Re: Mac Challenge by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    Well, obviously, because a shark is like a car and the medium that a shark swims through (ceaselessly making analogies), i.e., the ocean, is like the road system.

    Some analogies are like 5 lane highways, while others are little more than dirt paths. Just make sure you don't get shot in the head while on the dirt path, or this analogy will fail miserably.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  74. Re: Mac Challenge by Jerry+Smith · · Score: 1

    I completely understand your point. Yet I choose to heartily disagree. Especially the 'minor quibble'. The words 'unfair' and 'cheating' come to mind.

    --
    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
  75. Re:If it's not a conspiracy... by fufubag · · Score: 1
    The American Way took some wrong turns long ago.

    It's still way ahead of any other way.