Slashdot Mirror


User: libkarl2

libkarl2's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
108
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 108

  1. Re:Just great... on Anti-Rootkit Security Beyond the OS · · Score: 1

    Given the choice of McAfee or malware at this level, I would choose the malware.

    - Dan.

    Tell me again what the difference is?

    TCO.

  2. I can just hear the radio adverts.... on British Aircraft Carrier For Sale On Auction Site · · Score: 1

    A romantic gift for her this holiday season...

  3. Re:Wait on Gulf Gusher Worst Case Scenario · · Score: 1

    From Source:

    World Proved(1) Reserves of Oil and Natural Gas, Most Recent Estimates

    World Proved.... Okay lets see what that means...

    Again, from source:

    Proved reserves are estimated quantities that analysis of geologic and engineering data demonstrates with reasonable certainty are recoverable under existing economic and operating conditions.

    Okay. Supports (not proves) the argument that the reserves in the Gulf of Mexico probably only contain millions or perhaps billions, as opposed to trillions of barrels of oil.

    Is the DOE good enough?

    Normally I'd say yes, but I can't find ANY specifically mentioned offshore data in the rows. I can't find any of the major offshore reserves in this data. I'm not joking either. I looked.

    Perhaps I am simply misunderstanding the data. But then again, I'm not attempting to use this data to prove that "this guy is just a total idiot".

    Probably not, but whatever

    You're probably right, but whatever.

  4. Re:Wait on Gulf Gusher Worst Case Scenario · · Score: 1

    The current estimate for total world reserves is just over 1 trillion,

    Sauce plz.

    Thanks in advance.

  5. Re:A false choice, of course... on Health Care Reform · · Score: 1

    Are you implying that "centrists, libertarians, independents, right, etc" are somehow "unbiased peoples"?

    oh, that's right.... you posted AC. How subtle.

  6. Re:Unsurprising on PayPal Freezes the Assets of Wikileaks.org · · Score: 1

    I've avoided doing business with someone because it meant using Paypal. Don't trust them. Likely never will. It seems statistically unlikely that I'm the only one with this attitude toward them.

    Hmmm, I thought *I* was the only one.

    To second apoc.famine...

    A great many businesses have missed a great deal of my business because they are paypal only -- and I am paypal never. It sucks. I almost feel like some sort of Luddite because of my nearly morbid disdain of paypal but as was stated accurately before, they are not a bank. They don't operate on any rules other than their own TOS. I have to assume that are not FDIC insured (correct me if I'm wrong). They represent the way I do not handle my money. Period.

  7. Re:laughable on Eolas Sues World + Dog For AJAX Patent · · Score: 1

    Evil dies slowly and grows quickly if it's not fought.

    AND... when it posts anonymously.

  8. Re:I agree on Microsoft's Top Devs Don't Seem To Like Own Tools · · Score: 1

    "Programmers are a dime a dozen. We get 500+ resumes a week for your position alone. We can easily hire a programmer who won't get sick on the job for a fraction of what we pay you."

    For future reference, those are walking papers.

    I was given an equivalent song and dance once also (back in 2003). I had my resignation turned in in less than 30 minutes. Hated to do that, but at least I wasn't abandoning an important project at the time, plus I didn't want to be walked out by security. Later that month, four other devs followed suit.

  9. Re:This is ridiculous on Japan's Cell Phones May Get DRM, At Music Industry Behest · · Score: 1

    "this would connect to a DRM server on the Internet whenever the cell phone user would try to play a song. The song would only play if the response of the server would be positive. Otherwise no song would be played."

    Under this silly scheme, even the copyright owner couldn't listen to their own stuff on their own phone!

    That is the very first thing I thought of when I read the above statement. Essentially, the recording industry wants final say over which string of octets (bytes or data sent to an audio codex) are acceptable and which are not. Since there will (and can only) be a finite number of "acceptable" octet permutations, the number of unacceptable octet permutations becomes a mystery. If they leave it as finite, attempting to selectively target pirated copies, their DRM can be polymorphically (if not easily) circumvented. If the number of unacceptable octet permutations is infinite, then ONLY approved permutations of octets sent to said codex may be decoded. Checkmate! All your codex are belong to us.

    Mathematically, any fair and equitable version of this scheme is not feasible by any stretch of the imagination. This is before you take into account that if the DRM server is "unreachable" the codex must necessarily fail to operate. Otherwise the DRM is easily circumvented.

  10. Re:Isn't this like shouting 'fire' in a theatre? on Lori Drew Cyberbullying Case Dismissed · · Score: 1

    We don't need more criminal law on the books, there is already enough to make criminals of all of us.

    The Agile Police State: Criminalize everything/everyone you don't like. Selectively enforce.

  11. Re:I actually saw one of these.... on Hackers (Or Pen-Testers) Hit Credit Unions With Malware On CD · · Score: 1

    I wish I had been able to copy the CD and play around with the trojans in a sandbox but we were instructed not to touch it after we called the proper authorities. It would have been interesting to see what they were all about and where they are phoning home.

    That was the first thing that popped in to my head when I saw the article. Hacking brand new malware to see how it works and what it does is fascinating to me. Of course, when the Secret Service says "no touch", they really really mean it.

  12. Re:scumbags don't call me, but politicians do on FTC Rules Outlawing Robocalls Go Into Effect Next Week · · Score: 3, Funny

    scumbags don't call me, but politicians do

    You contradict yourself.

    No, you do. A "scumbag" is a failed sociopath. We call the successful ones "CEO", "Hedge Fund Manager", and "Sir".

    TRIPLE KILL!!!

  13. Re:Numbers spots inply painted lines on "Smart" Parking Meters Considered Dumb · · Score: 1

    Damn I'm slow today. Almost missed it:

    It takes a while, but as I said, when you look for 25 minutes to find a spot--if I even think I can fit, fuck it, I'm going in!

    Solid Gold!!!

  14. Re:Numbers spots inply painted lines on "Smart" Parking Meters Considered Dumb · · Score: 1

    Everybody should get on each others ass, that way there is no wasted space.

    WOOHOO! My new sig!

  15. Re:already on "Smart" Parking Meters Considered Dumb · · Score: 1

    Portland victim here... I concur. They are truly one of the ultimate expressions of technological douche-baggery ever inflicted on living creatures. At least we don't have the sensors (do we? Hell, I don't know). Just talking about it makes me want to go out and kill one WITH FIRE!!!! I even find myself avoiding the downtown area during the daytime because of those things.

  16. Re:Expectation of anonymity? on Model Drops Lawsuit After Outing Anonymous Blogger · · Score: 1

    This leaves an opening for abuse. One that will no doubt be ruthlessly exploited: The 'victim' merely has to 'claim' that her reputation was threatened or in some way affected by some remark made by an anonymous detractor. Court order -> detractor outed -> retribution time. I admit, once Cohen got her name. She chose not to go further with the pettiness. Kudos to her. However, this whole affair smacks of pettiness, and self indulgence on the parts of everyone involved. Including the judge, who played the role of enabler to some random internet cat fight on the public dime. (just my opinion... but I'm sticking to it)

    Cohen possibly felt this derogatory claim threatened her reputation or even her earning power.

    I've been there too, but in my case sniveling and whining did not constitute proper evidence. The judge was not nice about it either. I quietly and humbly learned a valuable lesson: Be able to show actual, compelling evidence or STFU. Cohen's snivelling was delivered by better attorneys and thus actionable. She bent the court AND Google to her will (practically on a whim, hooray for money). Worse things are said about better people everyday, but somehow this instance was special? I call bullshit. I have to. It's the only way I can stay sane. =-P

    If someone questions your skankiness in a newspaper, you generally have the power to rebut in the same forum. Not so in this case.

    How not so? If you mean f2f? Post IMO deserved to be outed, but not with taxpayer money, and 'just because I (Cohen) can'! That is my main opinion (which is probably wrong, but I refuse to give up my sanity for the sake of "legal correctness").

    And if you ever question my skankiness, there will be hell to pay! >;-D

  17. Re:Expectation of anonymity? on Model Drops Lawsuit After Outing Anonymous Blogger · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the correction.

  18. Re:Expectation of anonymity? on Model Drops Lawsuit After Outing Anonymous Blogger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Google should not have complied. It should have fought back instead of folding like cheap lawn furniture. However, Google is like any other American corporation when it comes to deciding whether or not to set a very bad precedent: take the cheapest route and smoke pole like a Tijuana crack whore.

    What Liskula Cohen did was game the system for ego gratification. Pure and simple. Google could have spotted this (I'm sure they have *some* intellegent people working there). Hell in fact the Judge in this case could have spotted this and told Ms. Cohen to grow up and stop acting like a narcissistic, spoiled little eleven year old. I'm almost positive that Cohen's attorney told her that the case was terribly weak. But no. Instead, they both 'presented' like a whipped omega baboon. Pathetic.

    In the US, it is quite legal for us to call each other names and say awful things about one another. Follow any election cycle! Plenty of people snipe at political candidates from what effectively constitutes 'anonymity'. Virtually nobody tries to stop them either. Its a hot kitchen, the internet. Man/woman up or GTFO. Sounds simple and fair to me.

    Also... There's this thing called Barratry. Most of the US legal system has forgotten that it exists.

  19. Re:Strongly typed language? on Scala, a Statically Typed, Functional, O-O Language · · Score: 4, Funny

    I don't mean to sound pedantic, or borish, but C is actually "yeah baby yeah" typed, to enable pointer arithmetic, stack space exhaustion, buffer overflows, and system level development. It's not incorrect to say that it is weakly typed, per se. It's just awkward having to try to explain the direct parallels between the C type system and a 70s style love-in (where anything goes) -- to your manager.

  20. Re:No 12" LCD can fit cargo pocket on Is Intel Killing 12-Inch Displays On Netbooks? · · Score: 1

    That might be fine when you're 18, but when you're 40 and your eyesight is starting to go you'll be glad of the larger pixels;

    And then there is the question of keyboard size. I cannot deal with the keyboards on 10" and 8" netbooks. My hands are just too big! At least with the 12" neties, I can type at about 15-20 WPM!!! Anything smaller and it's game over. =p

  21. Re:Cause/effect doesn't matter. on Psychopaths Have Brain Structure Abnormality · · Score: 1

    A human community that uses mechanical causation to account for human behavior cannot survive, because it cannot hold its members accountable for their behavior.

    Sure it can. Who ever said that a sane, sensible, rational, kind, conscientious person HAS to fight fair after being sucker punched?

    We must believe in motives for human behavior, or we cannot maintain community life.

    I don't mean to sound rude or impetuous Mr. Card, but we also must know our own mind, or we cannot avoid catastrophe.

  22. Re:Rarely the diplomate on Alan Cox Quits As Linux TTY Maintainer — "I've Had Enough" · · Score: 1

    That simian-masturbatory maniacal focus on security is exactly why I use OpenBSD. If I was a monkey, and jacking off was a primary mission goal, then clear, consistent priorities would have to made and adhered to. All other considerations would have to be shelved. These are necessary and vital preconditions for anyone who lives in a zoo.

  23. Re:Some observations on ImageShack Hacked, Security Groups Threatened · · Score: 1

    I don't know about the CS prof theory, but I'm not really willing to simply dismiss it offhand.

    There is a definite schiziodal declaration and different psychological knowledge embedded in their intent statement. The tracts of their manifesto (what I could find) struck me as doctrinaire, and para-moralistic: precisely the type of High Ideal/Low Internal Projection thinking that sucks in well intentioned but young, frantic, and inexperienced activists. They feel their cause is bigger than the damage they inflict on innocent by-standers, when in fact it is because their cause lies just slightly outside the normal person's worldview IMHO. They are becoming frustrated. They have to attack in order to be heard. They've already subverted their own cause in this regard. They've doomed themselves.

    Security by obscurity is proven myth. I would hate to have to be on the wrong side of that debate. Doesn't sound like much fun, and anything you say or do is only going to serve to strengthen your opponent's position.

    Ah, to be young again... and have absolutely no idea what I am doing...

  24. Re:Apple's concern on Browser Vendors Force W3C To Scrap HTML 5 Codecs · · Score: 1

    Bang!

  25. Re:Seriously Java? on Java Gets New Garbage Collector, But Only If You Buy Support · · Score: 1

    As per release notes, this is an experimental feature. It may be that Sun intends to provide it only to paid customers or it may be that they want to make sure you don't use it in "production" environment until it's ready and then whine that Java is buggy if it doesn't work 100%.

    The timing. Companies are getting desperate to generate new revenue streams, and preserve old ones. Certainly doesn't mean you are wrong, it just means that crummy economies help reinforce paranoia.

    I don't know which is true but the second possibility seems far more likely to me, making this story completely pointless and unfair - but hey this is slashdot.

    On slashdot, paranoia takes on a tawdry escapist quality.

    Btw, off topic but is it just me or the subjects in replies are showing up as white text on white bg in Firefox but look ok in IE. I even tried in on another pc and same thing.

    I'm not having that issue with FF v3.0.10.