The biblical description of the Antichrist is a prophet of peace that turns sour 3.71 years or so into his leadership or whatnaught. Whatever you want to believe in, I guess. Obamachrist! lol
Not my fault they won't let him into the presidential guest house. He had to rent a Hotel. That's absolutely retarded for the incumbent president (which McCain publicly supported) which has publicly condoned torture and implicated the implementation of Waterboarding in GITMO on his last press interview. That's not any crime. That's a warcrime. (--Paraphrased Source: MSNBC commentary shows) I'd rather have Nixon than Bush, at least Nixon was consistently angry-toned. Obama's PhotoOps now look like he's lost his zeal or they couldn't afford their Photoshop CS4 License. He seems wiped out already but he's not yet president. He's not enjoying the celebrity life that he made up. The office of the celebrity elect. I can't understand why Obama can't look back on 2000-2008 (btw Bush stole the election! and contributed to 9/11) to move the whole country, the whole moral standings of it's people, and the whole world forward. He's certainly lost his "charisma" that got him elected but at least he doesn't need a teleprompt he just uses notecards and a glass of water. Bush can barely read a teleprompt.
However, I really don't see where all the Hype is coming from. I think it's the republicans and conservative folk that are keeping the topic active by/replying on the forums.
His blackberry could be modded to support hardware level encryption or remote-deletion or a ghost layer as well as password protection and autolocking.
Or he could keep two separate devices. Bush had a cellphone but that was before Hybrid devices really kicked off. Blackberrys are meant for business people, so with a VPN and a passphrase (4-bit pin) only he knows to unlock the phone for personal calls (exempt from Phone company logging I would suppose, I don't think there's a subpeona issue here but under the wiretapping act/electronics surveillance act, all communications companies are required to keep extensive logs and recordings) and a PGP passphrase hash that changes every 10 minutes and is 1024 bits long and protected by a atomic-clock synced coder box that has a biometric lock on it. Wirelessly backed up and equipped with a small scale self-destruct device with the military encryption that changes every 10 seconds. Security plan, implemented! THIS MESSAGE WILL NOW *NO CARRIER*
Omgsh Obama Scene Investigation (ObamaSI) folks, except the show doesn't have any actual computer scientists on it. I.e., CSI sucks too many unrealistic scenarios and too many autopsies.
The proper links contain
I think I may need to get the A5 Nerve Checked, the limbic system seems to be in a perpetual stroke but the medication is still present. I can't use love/lust/sex to calm down though since I can't maintain a relationship. House, MD is classic http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Asperger Aspergeric, but there's no differentiation in the APA's bible. I am my own fucking doctor, thankyou unless denied perjury.
I'm 99.99% certain that you are being sacrastic, but I was technically DUI at the time at my computer box. That was mildly confusing to the 5 * numYearsActuallyExperiencedAtAgeFive;
Oh stupid HTML/XML, I hate well-forming you to exemplify you but I hate the escape operators just as much.
SQL servers are third party. They are Binary trees using n-degree. Think outside of the box may be good for the American mentality. Go dereference your sources @import Antigravity. How exactly do SQL servers intrepet a nullline character is beyond me but I think I would have to reach the exact character limit first.
Exactly my point, my friend. The RFID tags work SOO well that they need cameras because they've had problems before. So they've used faster cameras. Most people plead guilty without prejury if they are shown on video tape.
Safety isn't politics, it's the law for the cost of human life. I will always error on the side of safety, although sometimes I feel worried (anticipating an accident) when someone is too close behind me when the people changing lanes in front aren't paying close enough attention to their mirrors. Fish eye lens work SOOO well for my blind spots in my VW Cabrio.
Um. TraceRT routines? I have already found physical addresses for most of those people just by looking at standard IP geolocation and estimating. Most of them are from US IPs if it resolves to a IP directly. Stupid script kiddies. I'll stop by their house with a Wide-area jammer I made with a few spare parts and readily available frequencies (DSL reproduces LOTS of interference if carried over phone even though line-level should chop it off. It's not EMI shielded now days, it's sad. Need more Faraday cages and less reproduction of wireless frequencies like 60hz NJ powerline buzz) and see how the police on the scene deal with FCC derelugation if theres no person identifiable except the proof that they were doing something illegal to begin with.
Sheer Volume Versus Adaptability Sheer volume could target DNS servers themselves, this would only af
Please do not mention self-learning. That's merely musing. There's no self-intelligence here, it's timed with Christmas too catch IT departments offguard with unionized labor. It's just that humans control the fast botnets and make them slow by putting in delay timers. No one in the real IT world will be affected and no personal accounts will get stolen. I can crash MSN clients with some fast typing because MS is unstable, but the Windows XP is at it's prime.
Haha, finally someone figured out the point I'm trying to make. Mod parent up...er...well This is a tree so who's the parent of a n-tree when there is no root except for the ROOT? Slow bots aren't "adapting and evolving" they don't meet the definition of AI. AI has to self-evolve, otherwise its dumb AI/simulated AI / human-controlled AI. No robot wars as long as the international/federal/local government(s) can pull the plug on a computer so it would seem. Good thing Nixon isn't president though, like in the IT security futurama episode that created a time paradox.
I'm saying to make it less obvious to slow bots. I always worried about fast bots, but slow bots need to match USERNAME and PASSWORD. It's just too slow.
The issue would be brute brute force still works on servers that require logins.
The issue is solved with proper remote access control unless a proper SQL injection is done. SQL injections require better SQL database managers. I've never seen this affect real IT because there is no remote access in the real world unless you gain access to the routers of the building which are passive devices. Fast bot nets can target. But you seem to be missing the point entirely. The point is this doesn't meet the definition of AI since it has human influence. It has the definition of dumb AI. Dumb AI will only listen to programmers. The Federal government and/or CIA can get in on tracert routines, however, but not simple harassment issues. Local authorities may be significantly advantaged by the idea of entrapment, however.
I've looked at the TFA and the hard data and it seems like admins are the ones making the IT mistakes. With so many attempts for root and none of the other users personally identifiable, I can personally just set up a Bot to run tracert routines on failed attempts and report them for trying to access Root or Admin.
When it comes to multi-user sites however public key auth is standard, but your user ID and password have to match. What I don't understand is why everyone immediately resorts to AI development.
Clearly musing, he is. AI means "Self-adapting code". Self-adaption is too slow in real time and is only controlled by small control variables in games. Botnets have a heard. IT's the ADMIN's fault for being hearded, but they can have a techie d/c the power cord to save the rest of the world. Theres no real threat to secure folks because physical disconnection is trivial over a router (I just disable my IP assignment and I'm disconnected until I get another techie to do it physically) but more of a threat to people who can't control it. People controlled by the law, such as big-time Admins.
Sure, sure, the server won't crash when you're watching it, sure. But how boring will that be?
Here's the real issue: Remote Access
There has to be a way for the slow bots to get into root or admin or a remote access. I usually disable root or admin from working outside the internal loopback - 127.0.0.1 - standard Class A IP Address. I could technically configure a Bot to run Tracert (traceROOT) routines on all of those people (yes, windows user here) and have them reported to the federal government. It can't mess up my personal account, nor can it mess up DNS servers with sheer volume. It's small-scale.
so, the solution is proper remote access protocols. I remember NEVER activating remote access but at the same time using public-key authorized third party demo services to make minor changes remotely, including shutting the system down. I used logmein.com, free demo version, pathetically, but it's actually more secure as long as I have no idea how why I should do it myself. Once I used the shutdown signal it could not boot itself up unless someone would physically press the button. I have to call a physical person in the house to do that myself, so unless demons from hell can use an on/offswitch and my BIOS password without my permission, it ain't starting on it's own nor does it listen for a restart signal until I sign into windows for the first time (Windows XP here). My system has never been breached before, but it constantly deadlocks to save itself from burning the CPU out. It has a thermosensor and cutoff only in the power supply unit, however. Stupid laptops weren't designed for gaming even though thats how its advertised. How do I pull an all nighter at this rate? I'll just remove the sensor in my power supply and WHAM there goes my processor for not having heat sensors. Stupid dell power supply. Rocket fish will at least deadlock my system without damaging my hard disk.
Correct, but look at all the attempts for "Root". I mean I would certainly call tech support if I couldn't log in under my user, but you are "missing the point entirely". I've never had a remote access protocol I didn't have another way around by physically shutting down the system before I saw it go caput. I've disabled the user called root and admin from accessing externally. It only works with internal loopback... dDoS attacks could affect actual DNS servers with sheer brute force or Spam. Destroying the Internet is a much less dangerous prospect than AI development. Someone is behind the scenes, but the Original Article, TFA as some people say, mentions nothing about AI development except smug analogs to robot takeover.
That would stop small scale hackers but not people that want to use passwords instead of remembering hash files stored with text files on their flash drive... Think beyond desktop OS's now and think more toward people that leave their systems on. Is anyone really that stupid to leave there personal desktop on and run up their energy bill? Can a brute force attack work with sleeping computers? It's a slow brute force network because you're being attacked by sleeping computers (I've seen SQL servers go into Sleep Mode at places where I don't control IT, sadly) hence zombie invasion or more like sleep walking computers!
Yes, it is a good idea. Do it to a High-ranking official, especially one close to the camera system multiple times. Duplicate the plates in a moral durable form. The speed cameras will go away forever if it the prank of "pimping" is done properly.
Most of the cameras here are intentionally broken and never fixed by the state. I'm really not sure why the EZ-pass has a speed limit on the other hand, I always felt like the person behind me was too close if I slowed down to 15mph when I can't make it to the High-speed EZ-pass lanes or they do not exist. Cars in front or real people from the cash lanes are an entirely different story, but I've never gotten a ticket in the mail but I'm pretty sure it doesn't get points on your record. My speeding ticket cost me $200 but $40 would seem like a level n misdemeanor. Sometimes it is easier just to pay the fine because it doesn't go on your driving record.
Someone needs to graph RIAA net profits from 1990-today (down) along with Piracy (up) and DRM controls (up). They are losing both authors and customers and sell the same stupid music in high-def (even though it was never recorded in any remotely high-fidelity format and there is no HD standard).
Not if people use piracy in order to fully preview the material they are getting. keep in mind the RIAA could care less about the internet or computer programmers.
This threat has more strength as a "Sleeper cell" where as nuclear missiles may turn out to be duds due to nuclear decay and may/usually result in world Armageddon, where as bot nets can be used much more selectively. DNS Servers could be targeted. However defining arbitrary "spam" and "not spam" might be one step to "!helpful".
I run into this trying to price my "decent quality" like-new games (I resurface the disk with a professional resurfacing device and happen to have the original manual and case [but nothing else]) when bootleggers can sell for 99 cents, which actually causes you to lose money but you can make it up on most items with shipping credit by shipping USPS first class. (Shipping credit and commission fees aside.) "If you don't like this, request DRM-free files."--XKCD tooltip.
I can go into detail, but it will sound like a rant. There are non-obstrusive DRMs for games and music if you intend to stick with iTunes or just buy DRM-free from Amazon.
Yes, everything has a potential to be corrupted, but at this point the potential for abuse is much less than the actual corruption or perceived corruption due to lack of competition that is in place. Additionally, most towns (rightfully so) are against building additionally infrastructure so whoever bids the highest initially gets to keep it to themselves. How is that right?
--Options in Barnegat Light New Jersey-- Address: You do not exist in the post office database because you have a post office instead of an actual mailbox. This causes problems. Water/Sewer: Townshipped owned and operated. Flat rate fee, however there are water expenditure limits during the summer (which are most likely measure by the number of gardens you are watering and the cars are you are washing I've never seen the actual meter). Roads: DoT-owned/supervised, but are torn up right after they finish repaving because of the water company's inconspicuous timing. Power: Atlantic electric, Inc. Gas: New Jersey Natural Gas Telephone: Verizon Landline or Internet phone (inexplicably throttled or beaten to death by comcast at random) Cellphone: AT&T or Verizon Analog TV Reception Capacity via Antenna: Spanish channels only Cable: Comcast Basic Cable or Comcast Digital Cable. Some of the Basic Cable channels are completely digital and require a converter box anyway. The law that prevents them from doing this, based on every receivable TV VHF/UHF/ or whatever antenna transmissions being shown on basic cable is probably moot since analog antenna transmissions won't exist in 2009, and analog cable transmissions are next. Internet: AOL Dialup or Comcast High-Speed (but-Inexplicably-Throttled-To-Kill-Vonage) Internet
So explain to me how this could possibly get any worse outside of straight up data falsification and military dictatorship?
I'm not talking about specifically about mosaics, it's just the amount of human effort of figuring out every color in a 2000-piece set must reach the point of diminishing returns fairly quickly (more people might take more time), so I figured they may have some scanning software.
US courts seem to be a loser-takes-all-system but the cases were dropped, it would the media was insured (so no direct cost to the producers), and the producer was probably just happy to move on.
Furthermore DMCA takedown notices, no matter how fraudulent, have no negative effect on the person filing the notice (as long as they own the copyright, if you are not the copyright holder or a representative of them you can not claim infringement [but they will/should CTA and take the post/file/etc down] because "content is the responsibility of the user" never seems to have stood up in court especially when all hosts are required to report things illegal to the government or face $3000/case fines)...just look at isohunt, most of there takedown notices are from movie or music companies that file takedown notices for anything remotely containing the names or parts of names (not subject to copyright, sometimes not even trademark) or resemble something popularly infringed even when clearly the description, the file (which they don't download the.torrent to prosecute the offenders for uploading it to them...hey, if US juries are convinced that "Files merely available on the system" leads to the defendant being found guilty and resulting in a mistrial and retrial later, what makes you think they'll be able to tell the difference between a.exe and a.mp3, let alone actually verify the file is the file in question?) and even when the file type (not a.zipped archive) and MIME type is clearly not music or a video. Of course, once they file a DMCA suit the safehabor provisions should protect you, but generally also means taking down stuff questionable, in gray areas, or downright frivolous, like how wikipedia was forced to remove publicly available information on their site within 100+ articles due to the copyrighted method of sorting out the data.
Now, that being said, it's probably much worse for those who don't receive DMCA notices first (or people like me in which case it would be shipped to barnegat due to the post office database auto-correcting the entry "barnegat light"...and everyone uses the postoffice database--which doesn't work (you don't EXIST in the database) if you don't have a mailbox and instead have a post office).
For the same reason you don't connect the LHC to the internet or Nuclear Launch Facilities to the Internet.
Now, of course, if it could interfere with the altitude sensor (which could either be mechanical or GPS based), who's the bozo programmer of the autopilot program that allowed it to "autocorrect" a "change in atitude" at a speed that could very easily kill, maim, or otherwise be dangerous. That being said, while my bluetooth mouse can control my computer from across the room and I have two receivers with one sender for the purposes of dual-boxing a shaman on wow, and it was trivial to set up (but I don't use it since the frame rate/screen size differences don't seem to be avoidable without running my main computer fullscreen and I also can't have a hardware mouse to control the clone computer separately since the logitech device takes a USB AND PS/2 Port and it only has one working USB 2.0 port and 4 working USB 1.1 ports but the computer is scrap and isn't worth fixing unless I can get a server to run on it, but I don't see the point of trying when it's against Comcast policy to run a server (cough, this is how we could stop P2P, contract-violations-not-throttling--i.e., "we have a backup plan") but how it can reach the cabin kinda bugs me, when it should be EM shielded (Blame solar flares).
Now, of course, THEY'RE still responsible (or would be in the US), at least since "Comments are owned by the Poster" hasn't seemed to help Youtube versus Viacom or other IP suits, probably "Wireless devices are owned by the Passenger" won't help Airlines when it comes to physical injury.
I personally blame them for activating ECM because they falsely detected a Radar-source-seeking-missile launch...planes are equipped with that you know (actually they're equipped with countermeasure flares, i.e., dummy heat sources)
Considering Verzion charges 4.99$/per 411 service, it wouldn't affect them (since all messaging in network in most plans are free, and even if you don't have that kind of plan, messages sent from Verzion are excluded from your bill [but they can't convert from cents to dollars so your bill we be higher anyway!)]
The biblical description of the Antichrist is a prophet of peace that turns sour 3.71 years or so into his leadership or whatnaught. Whatever you want to believe in, I guess. Obamachrist! lol
/replying on the forums.
Not my fault they won't let him into the presidential guest house. He had to rent a Hotel. That's absolutely retarded for the incumbent president (which McCain publicly supported) which has publicly condoned torture and implicated the implementation of Waterboarding in GITMO on his last press interview. That's not any crime. That's a warcrime. (--Paraphrased Source: MSNBC commentary shows) I'd rather have Nixon than Bush, at least Nixon was consistently angry-toned. Obama's PhotoOps now look like he's lost his zeal or they couldn't afford their Photoshop CS4 License. He seems wiped out already but he's not yet president. He's not enjoying the celebrity life that he made up. The office of the celebrity elect. I can't understand why Obama can't look back on 2000-2008 (btw Bush stole the election! and contributed to 9/11) to move the whole country, the whole moral standings of it's people, and the whole world forward. He's certainly lost his "charisma" that got him elected but at least he doesn't need a teleprompt he just uses notecards and a glass of water. Bush can barely read a teleprompt.
However, I really don't see where all the Hype is coming from. I think it's the republicans and conservative folk that are keeping the topic active by
His blackberry could be modded to support hardware level encryption or remote-deletion or a ghost layer as well as password protection and autolocking.
Or he could keep two separate devices. Bush had a cellphone but that was before Hybrid devices really kicked off. Blackberrys are meant for business people, so with a VPN and a passphrase (4-bit pin) only he knows to unlock the phone for personal calls (exempt from Phone company logging I would suppose, I don't think there's a subpeona issue here but under the wiretapping act/electronics surveillance act, all communications companies are required to keep extensive logs and recordings) and a PGP passphrase hash that changes every 10 minutes and is 1024 bits long and protected by a atomic-clock synced coder box that has a biometric lock on it. Wirelessly backed up and equipped with a small scale self-destruct device with the military encryption that changes every 10 seconds. Security plan, implemented! THIS MESSAGE WILL NOW *NO CARRIER*
Omgsh Obama Scene Investigation (ObamaSI) folks, except the show doesn't have any actual computer scientists on it. I.e., CSI sucks too many unrealistic scenarios and too many autopsies.
I.e., he needs to hire me!
The proper links contain I think I may need to get the A5 Nerve Checked, the limbic system seems to be in a perpetual stroke but the medication is still present. I can't use love/lust/sex to calm down though since I can't maintain a relationship. House, MD is classic http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Asperger Aspergeric, but there's no differentiation in the APA's bible. I am my own fucking doctor, thankyou unless denied perjury.
I'm 99.99% certain that you are being sacrastic, but I was technically DUI at the time at my computer box. That was mildly confusing to the 5 * numYearsActuallyExperiencedAtAgeFive;
Oh stupid HTML/XML, I hate well-forming you to exemplify you but I hate the escape operators just as much.
SQL servers are third party. They are Binary trees using n-degree. Think outside of the box may be good for the American mentality. Go dereference your sources @import Antigravity. How exactly do SQL servers intrepet a nullline character is beyond me but I think I would have to reach the exact character limit first.
Exactly my point, my friend. The RFID tags work SOO well that they need cameras because they've had problems before. So they've used faster cameras. Most people plead guilty without prejury if they are shown on video tape.
Safety isn't politics, it's the law for the cost of human life. I will always error on the side of safety, although sometimes I feel worried (anticipating an accident) when someone is too close behind me when the people changing lanes in front aren't paying close enough attention to their mirrors. Fish eye lens work SOOO well for my blind spots in my VW Cabrio.
How do you treat a terrorist?
It's the caffeine. They need to stop giving me anti-depressants. IT's 1:32AM and I feel too energetic for chronotherapy.
Um. TraceRT routines? I have already found physical addresses for most of those people just by looking at standard IP geolocation and estimating. Most of them are from US IPs if it resolves to a IP directly. Stupid script kiddies. I'll stop by their house with a Wide-area jammer I made with a few spare parts and readily available frequencies (DSL reproduces LOTS of interference if carried over phone even though line-level should chop it off. It's not EMI shielded now days, it's sad. Need more Faraday cages and less reproduction of wireless frequencies like 60hz NJ powerline buzz) and see how the police on the scene deal with FCC derelugation if theres no person identifiable except the proof that they were doing something illegal to begin with.
Sheer Volume Versus Adaptability
Sheer volume could target DNS servers themselves, this would only af
Please do not mention self-learning. That's merely musing. There's no self-intelligence here, it's timed with Christmas too catch IT departments offguard with unionized labor. It's just that humans control the fast botnets and make them slow by putting in delay timers. No one in the real IT world will be affected and no personal accounts will get stolen. I can crash MSN clients with some fast typing because MS is unstable, but the Windows XP is at it's prime.
Haha, finally someone figured out the point I'm trying to make. Mod parent up...er...well This is a tree so who's the parent of a n-tree when there is no root except for the ROOT? Slow bots aren't "adapting and evolving" they don't meet the definition of AI. AI has to self-evolve, otherwise its dumb AI /simulated AI / human-controlled AI. No robot wars as long as the international/federal/local government(s) can pull the plug on a computer so it would seem. Good thing Nixon isn't president though, like in the IT security futurama episode that created a time paradox.
I'm saying to make it less obvious to slow bots. I always worried about fast bots, but slow bots need to match USERNAME and PASSWORD. It's just too slow.
The issue would be brute brute force still works on servers that require logins.
The issue is solved with proper remote access control unless a proper SQL injection is done. SQL injections require better SQL database managers. I've never seen this affect real IT because there is no remote access in the real world unless you gain access to the routers of the building which are passive devices. Fast bot nets can target. But you seem to be missing the point entirely. The point is this doesn't meet the definition of AI since it has human influence. It has the definition of dumb AI. Dumb AI will only listen to programmers. The Federal government and/or CIA can get in on tracert routines, however, but not simple harassment issues. Local authorities may be significantly advantaged by the idea of entrapment, however.
I've looked at the TFA and the hard data and it seems like admins are the ones making the IT mistakes. With so many attempts for root and none of the other users personally identifiable, I can personally just set up a Bot to run tracert routines on failed attempts and report them for trying to access Root or Admin.
When it comes to multi-user sites however public key auth is standard, but your user ID and password have to match. What I don't understand is why everyone immediately resorts to AI development.
Clearly musing, he is. AI means "Self-adapting code". Self-adaption is too slow in real time and is only controlled by small control variables in games. Botnets have a heard. IT's the ADMIN's fault for being hearded, but they can have a techie d/c the power cord to save the rest of the world. Theres no real threat to secure folks because physical disconnection is trivial over a router (I just disable my IP assignment and I'm disconnected until I get another techie to do it physically) but more of a threat to people who can't control it. People controlled by the law, such as big-time Admins.
Sure, sure, the server won't crash when you're watching it, sure. But how boring will that be?
Here's the real issue: Remote Access
There has to be a way for the slow bots to get into root or admin or a remote access. I usually disable root or admin from working outside the internal loopback - 127.0.0.1 - standard Class A IP Address. I could technically configure a Bot to run Tracert (traceROOT) routines on all of those people (yes, windows user here) and have them reported to the federal government. It can't mess up my personal account, nor can it mess up DNS servers with sheer volume. It's small-scale.
so, the solution is proper remote access protocols. I remember NEVER activating remote access but at the same time using public-key authorized third party demo services to make minor changes remotely, including shutting the system down. I used logmein.com, free demo version, pathetically, but it's actually more secure as long as I have no idea how why I should do it myself. Once I used the shutdown signal it could not boot itself up unless someone would physically press the button. I have to call a physical person in the house to do that myself, so unless demons from hell can use an on/offswitch and my BIOS password without my permission, it ain't starting on it's own nor does it listen for a restart signal until I sign into windows for the first time (Windows XP here). My system has never been breached before, but it constantly deadlocks to save itself from burning the CPU out. It has a thermosensor and cutoff only in the power supply unit, however. Stupid laptops weren't designed for gaming even though thats how its advertised. How do I pull an all nighter at this rate? I'll just remove the sensor in my power supply and WHAM there goes my processor for not having heat sensors. Stupid dell power supply. Rocket fish will at least deadlock my system without damaging my hard disk.
Correct, but look at all the attempts for "Root". I mean I would certainly call tech support if I couldn't log in under my user, but you are "missing the point entirely". I've never had a remote access protocol I didn't have another way around by physically shutting down the system before I saw it go caput. I've disabled the user called root and admin from accessing externally. It only works with internal loopback... dDoS attacks could affect actual DNS servers with sheer brute force or Spam. Destroying the Internet is a much less dangerous prospect than AI development. Someone is behind the scenes, but the Original Article, TFA as some people say, mentions nothing about AI development except smug analogs to robot takeover.
That would stop small scale hackers but not people that want to use passwords instead of remembering hash files stored with text files on their flash drive... Think beyond desktop OS's now and think more toward people that leave their systems on. Is anyone really that stupid to leave there personal desktop on and run up their energy bill? Can a brute force attack work with sleeping computers? It's a slow brute force network because you're being attacked by sleeping computers (I've seen SQL servers go into Sleep Mode at places where I don't control IT, sadly) hence zombie invasion or more like sleep walking computers!
Yes, it is a good idea. Do it to a High-ranking official, especially one close to the camera system multiple times. Duplicate the plates in a moral durable form. The speed cameras will go away forever if it the prank of "pimping" is done properly.
Most of the cameras here are intentionally broken and never fixed by the state. I'm really not sure why the EZ-pass has a speed limit on the other hand, I always felt like the person behind me was too close if I slowed down to 15mph when I can't make it to the High-speed EZ-pass lanes or they do not exist. Cars in front or real people from the cash lanes are an entirely different story, but I've never gotten a ticket in the mail but I'm pretty sure it doesn't get points on your record. My speeding ticket cost me $200 but $40 would seem like a level n misdemeanor. Sometimes it is easier just to pay the fine because it doesn't go on your driving record.
Someone needs to graph RIAA net profits from 1990-today (down) along with Piracy (up) and DRM controls (up). They are losing both authors and customers and sell the same stupid music in high-def (even though it was never recorded in any remotely high-fidelity format and there is no HD standard).
Not if people use piracy in order to fully preview the material they are getting. keep in mind the RIAA could care less about the internet or computer programmers.
This threat has more strength as a "Sleeper cell" where as nuclear missiles may turn out to be duds due to nuclear decay and may/usually result in world Armageddon, where as bot nets can be used much more selectively. DNS Servers could be targeted. However defining arbitrary "spam" and "not spam" might be one step to "!helpful".
I run into this trying to price my "decent quality" like-new games (I resurface the disk with a professional resurfacing device and happen to have the original manual and case [but nothing else]) when bootleggers can sell for 99 cents, which actually causes you to lose money but you can make it up on most items with shipping credit by shipping USPS first class. (Shipping credit and commission fees aside.)
"If you don't like this, request DRM-free files."--XKCD tooltip.
I can go into detail, but it will sound like a rant. There are non-obstrusive DRMs for games and music if you intend to stick with iTunes or just buy DRM-free from Amazon.
Yes, everything has a potential to be corrupted, but at this point the potential for abuse is much less than the actual corruption or perceived corruption due to lack of competition that is in place. Additionally, most towns (rightfully so) are against building additionally infrastructure so whoever bids the highest initially gets to keep it to themselves. How is that right?
--Options in Barnegat Light New Jersey-- /supervised, but are torn up right after they finish repaving because of the water company's inconspicuous timing.
Address: You do not exist in the post office database because you have a post office instead of an actual mailbox. This causes problems.
Water/Sewer: Townshipped owned and operated. Flat rate fee, however there are water expenditure limits during the summer (which are most likely measure by the number of gardens you are watering and the cars are you are washing I've never seen the actual meter).
Roads: DoT-owned
Power: Atlantic electric, Inc.
Gas: New Jersey Natural Gas
Telephone: Verizon Landline or Internet phone (inexplicably throttled or beaten to death by comcast at random)
Cellphone: AT&T or Verizon
Analog TV Reception Capacity via Antenna: Spanish channels only
Cable: Comcast Basic Cable or Comcast Digital Cable. Some of the Basic Cable channels are completely digital and require a converter box anyway. The law that prevents them from doing this, based on every receivable TV VHF/UHF/ or whatever antenna transmissions being shown on basic cable is probably moot since analog antenna transmissions won't exist in 2009, and analog cable transmissions are next.
Internet: AOL Dialup or Comcast High-Speed (but-Inexplicably-Throttled-To-Kill-Vonage) Internet
So explain to me how this could possibly get any worse outside of straight up data falsification and military dictatorship?
I'm not talking about specifically about mosaics, it's just the amount of human effort of figuring out every color in a 2000-piece set must reach the point of diminishing returns fairly quickly (more people might take more time), so I figured they may have some scanning software.
15 seconds, I believe, is not enough to constitute copyright infringement, because/and it is fair use regardless of how you use it.
there's defamation cases for things like that
US courts seem to be a loser-takes-all-system but the cases were dropped, it would the media was insured (so no direct cost to the producers), and the producer was probably just happy to move on.
Furthermore DMCA takedown notices, no matter how fraudulent, have no negative effect on the person filing the notice (as long as they own the copyright, if you are not the copyright holder or a representative of them you can not claim infringement [but they will/should CTA and take the post/file/etc down] because "content is the responsibility of the user" never seems to have stood up in court especially when all hosts are required to report things illegal to the government or face $3000/case fines)...just look at isohunt, most of there takedown notices are from movie or music companies that file takedown notices for anything remotely containing the names or parts of names (not subject to copyright, sometimes not even trademark) or resemble something popularly infringed even when clearly the description, the file (which they don't download the .torrent to prosecute the offenders for uploading it to them...hey, if US juries are convinced that "Files merely available on the system" leads to the defendant being found guilty and resulting in a mistrial and retrial later, what makes you think they'll be able to tell the difference between a .exe and a .mp3, let alone actually verify the file is the file in question?) and even when the file type (not a .zipped archive) and MIME type is clearly not music or a video. Of course, once they file a DMCA suit the safehabor provisions should protect you, but generally also means taking down stuff questionable, in gray areas, or downright frivolous, like how wikipedia was forced to remove publicly available information on their site within 100+ articles due to the copyrighted method of sorting out the data.
Now, that being said, it's probably much worse for those who don't receive DMCA notices first (or people like me in which case it would be shipped to barnegat due to the post office database auto-correcting the entry "barnegat light"...and everyone uses the postoffice database--which doesn't work (you don't EXIST in the database) if you don't have a mailbox and instead have a post office).
For the same reason you don't connect the LHC to the internet or Nuclear Launch Facilities to the Internet.
Now, of course, if it could interfere with the altitude sensor (which could either be mechanical or GPS based), who's the bozo programmer of the autopilot program that allowed it to "autocorrect" a "change in atitude" at a speed that could very easily kill, maim, or otherwise be dangerous. That being said, while my bluetooth mouse can control my computer from across the room and I have two receivers with one sender for the purposes of dual-boxing a shaman on wow, and it was trivial to set up (but I don't use it since the frame rate/screen size differences don't seem to be avoidable without running my main computer fullscreen and I also can't have a hardware mouse to control the clone computer separately since the logitech device takes a USB AND PS/2 Port and it only has one working USB 2.0 port and 4 working USB 1.1 ports but the computer is scrap and isn't worth fixing unless I can get a server to run on it, but I don't see the point of trying when it's against Comcast policy to run a server (cough, this is how we could stop P2P, contract-violations-not-throttling--i.e., "we have a backup plan") but how it can reach the cabin kinda bugs me, when it should be EM shielded (Blame solar flares).
Now, of course, THEY'RE still responsible (or would be in the US), at least since "Comments are owned by the Poster" hasn't seemed to help Youtube versus Viacom or other IP suits, probably "Wireless devices are owned by the Passenger" won't help Airlines when it comes to physical injury.
I personally blame them for activating ECM because they falsely detected a Radar-source-seeking-missile launch...planes are equipped with that you know (actually they're equipped with countermeasure flares, i.e., dummy heat sources)
Supercomputer brute force attack? The strength of 128-bit keys or even 1024 bit keys aren't that powerful...
And let's not forget that merely encrypting your data is (can be) incriminating.
Considering Verzion charges 4.99$/per 411 service, it wouldn't affect them (since all messaging in network in most plans are free, and even if you don't have that kind of plan, messages sent from Verzion are excluded from your bill [but they can't convert from cents to dollars so your bill we be higher anyway!)]