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User: brain159

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  1. Re:Good point! on Twister: The Fully Decentralized P2P Microblogging Platform · · Score: 1

    It would be a good move to get it in to the Raspbian repos, as that's now the dominant distro for Raspberry Pi. There's plenty of under-utilised rPi boards in the world which would be suitable local terminals in to Twister.

  2. Re:From my cold dead hands... on Chrome Will End XP Support in 2015; Firefox Has No Plans To Stop · · Score: 5, Funny

    Will you drop some loot as well?

  3. Kevin Bloody Warwick on Captain Cyborg Is Back! Kevin Warwick Predicts the Future · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The only thing I need to say about Kevin Bloody Warwick is this:

    In his lectures in the Intro To Cybernetics module at the University Of Reading, he played long video clips from The Lawnmower Man. With a straight face.

    (Source: BSc in comp sci at Reading, 2000 - 2003)

  4. Re:Who leaves money in a paypal account. on PayPal Freezes MailPile's Account · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's poor form to use a referral link that will personally benefit you in this sort of context. It diminishes your point, making you look like any other spammer or paid shill.

  5. Re:What? on Controversy Over Violet Blue's Harm Reduction Talk · · Score: 1

    Then don't go to that clearly-labelled session. Job done, next?

  6. Re:No the complaining will start... on Firefox Will Soon Block Third-Party Cookies · · Score: 1

    shadyads.interestingsite.com will be a CNAME dns record, referring over to shadyads.com - so their server will be accessed as if it's part of interestingsite.com's domain, elevating the cookie to First Party status even though it's transmitted to-and-from an entity which is third-party. The wrinkle is that interestingsite have intentionally given shadyads the authority to do this, by adding that dns record.

  7. Re:hum..... on The Promo Bay Blocked By UK ISPs · · Score: 1

    ThePromoBay.co.uk is fine but PromoBay.org is blocking on Be (O2).

    The former (.co.uk) is a proxy - see the small print "Powered by Unblock The Pirate Bay v1" in the footer.

  8. Re:Uh oh. on Juror's Tweets Overturn Trial Verdict · · Score: 5, Funny

    He's ignorant - but, as someone with a lower UID than you, I find you guilty of being a cockbag.

  9. TV-B-Gone on 'Anonymous' Plans Sony Boycott On April 16 · · Score: 1

    Just throwing this out there, I'm not available to go do this myself, but a TV-B-Gone or similar "universal TV turner-offer" device would be useful for this action. Even if you're not visibly obviously "doing protesting", you can help Sony reduce their carbon footprints by turning off all their store display TVs for them.

  10. Re:Yeah yeah on PayPal Freezes Support Account For Bradley Manning · · Score: 3, Interesting

    http://www.bitcoin.org/ and a recent episode of Security Now went into a bunch of detail about the theory of how it works.

    (tl;dr hard crypto-guesswork puzzles are used to restrict the creation of their new digital currency. It is apparently anonymous and untraceable, and some sites already exist that will trade it for RL US$)

  11. Re:bullllllshit on Spamhaus Under DDoS Over Wikileaks.info · · Score: 1

    Please expand on how you set up virtual-hosting-by-name to support SSL properly - i.e. all the sites on the same IP being able to do SSL with their own domains.

  12. Re:Actually Point and shoots zoom better than SLRs on Kuwait Bans DSLR Cameras Use For Non-Journalists · · Score: 1

    An alternative would be an Eye-Fi card and a MiFi 3g-to-wifi pocket router.

    I have that pairing, they work very well - although you might want to cut back on image resolution or JPG quality to get a smaller file so it uploads faster.

  13. Re:They need a simple guide or something to click! on Herding Firesheep In NYC — Do Users Care? · · Score: 1

    I fully expect, within 14 days of now (if that), for people to be using this in busy locations to send links out to victims friends telling them to "click here to browse my holiday photos with this cool FakePhotosRealMalware tool!".

    Not that I'm going to do it, just that it's really obvious and I want to feel smug for totally calling it.

  14. Re:Interestingly, the author of TFA never consider on Herding Firesheep In NYC — Do Users Care? · · Score: 1

    *Switched* network. Read smarter, not harder.

  15. Re:Standards from the BBC on BBC To Create Internet Protocol TV Standard · · Score: 1

    See the BBC's recent requests to OFCOM to be allowed to DRM the FreeviewHD EPG data and require Feature Breakification of receiver hardware in order to be given a license to unlock it.

    That's pro-rightsholder and anti-consumer.

    QED.

  16. Re:Sucks. VLC was the play anything player on VLC 1.1 Forced To Drop Shoutcast Due To AOL Anti-OSS Provision · · Score: 1

    I don't *think* it's "the ability to connect to shoutcast media streams" that's going away - just the ShoutCAST-branded radio stream directory side of things. (I wouldn't mind know for sure, though.)

    It would seem to be the same sort of thing that CDDB pulled once it got commercialized - "our servers are only for the use of Officially Blessed clients".

  17. Re:Yet MS insists in using it on The End of the 3.5-inch Floppy Continues · · Score: 1

    Create a variant install disc with the drivers slipstreamed in. In fact, the odds are pretty good you can get away with just slipstreaming Service Pack 3 (assuming you mean Windows XP).

    http://www.winsupersite.com/showcase/xpsp3_slipstream.asp has full walkthrough.

  18. Re:Horrible post on Company Sued, Loses For Not Using Patented Tech · · Score: 1

    If you hit a DUCK with an Echo, would it make a sound, surely?

  19. Re:Continued misuse of blacklists on Detecting Anonymously Registered Domains · · Score: 1

    In some parts of the world, PO Boxes are not particularly cheap and are absolutely not anonymous. In the UK they cost a bunch (I forget specifics, but it's waaay more than an extra $9 per year for each of the few domains I have set up with DBProxy), and ANYBODY can obtain the name and real-address of the owner simply by writing and asking the Royal Mail.

    That's right - no court order, no lawyer intervention, just ask. (There are some specific cases where that doesn't apply, but the general "there are dickheads on the internet" isn't one of them.)

  20. Re:VAC is a joke on Valve's Battle Against Cheaters · · Score: 1

    You ultimately run the risk of Valve shitcanning your entire Steam account. If you can't sign in to Steam, you can't play online - and even if you worked around that somehow, you couldn't get updates.

  21. Re:OOh on Windows 7 Clean Install Only In Europe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It won't work the same way. For win7 Upgrade versions (from what I've gathered) you'll have to install and activate your Old OS and then put 7 on over the top.

    MS are basically doing us in Europe a huge favour - the preorder pricing for Win7 Home Premium E is VERY heavily discounted. Like, it's about £50.

    We couldn't Upgrade if we wanted to (meh), don't have IE installed as default (yay!), and get the Full Version for the price they would've been charging for the inferior Upgrade Edition.

  22. Re:Voltage and current on Handset Vendors Plug Micro-USB Charge Ports · · Score: 1

    The Three 3g/hsdpa dongle (which is really a Huawei modem) does the same trick - plug it in, Windows sees a USB CDROM drive and (unless you've disabled it) will autorun the driver installer.

    The same technique is used more generally by "U3" flashdisks (from Sandisk, primarily). There's a way to remove that behaviour from the device - and quite probably a way to make it launch your arbitary attack-code instead of the U3 Launcher.

  23. Re:Oh great... on Full Review of the T-Mobile G1 Android Device · · Score: 1

    It's relatively hard for an Android application to actually automatically initiate a call. It requires a Permission flag which is going to be quite hard to get at install-time (I believe it'll throw a huge red WARNING sort of alert up).

    However, it's pretty easy for an app to nearly initiate a call - passing the number to the Dialler and requiring that the user approve by hitting Send/Call/Green themselves.

    If you don't empower the Average User to make that sort of decision, then you also ensure that developers are not free to innovate.

  24. Re:Uh, Sleep Mode - shutdown? on Do Any Companies Power Down at Night? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The student who walked away from (or, fell asleep at) the PC without saving learns a valuable lesson.

  25. Re:If true, this isn't particularly surprising. on Thousands of Adult Website Accounts Compromised · · Score: 1

    NATS require that all their customers provide NATS with a login to their server, for "administration".

    So, it's clear to me that:
    1) CC data could well have been taken.
    2) NATS's customers handle CC data, and NATS were grossly negligent in their letting bad people use those logins.

    NATS = grossly negligent, massively incompetent, compounded by an extensive cover-up operation.