Support those candidates, regardless of party, that promise to end the Dept of Homeland Security, promise to repeal the USA PATRIOT ACT Does this include anyone who is actively running for president? RP has dropped out, and I don't believe either dem advocate it. That I am aware, none of my [florida's] potential congress people do either.
well, because this isn't the final step in the process, there is no real advantage to roof top, as it all has to get shipped out to a refinery and back (rather than photovoltic cells delivering power where it is needed.) Water is pretty heavy stuff anyway, and my POS roof need a fair bit of work before it would support an extra few tonnes(cubic meters) of water.
Don't know, but this doesn't seem like it would all that great a use of roof tops.
It's nice that Sun is open-sourcing Java. But it's also kind of funny/sad that only Sun would invent a hugely successful product, not make a dime on it, and yet keep it closed-sourced for 13 years.
So, they just default to installing the Google Toolbar with the jre because google kicks butt? I'm sure they have made a few dimes off of it.
I'd rather people use the various encryption schemes built into bit torrent clients already, rather than letting the bad people win, and forcing me to download torrent where I can't tell what the actual content is and need to get the whole thing before I can check the quality.
2) Once you detect it, wouldn't it be easier to propagate a request up your stream asking it to cut off incoming traffic from X?
For example, if I (somehow) know the IPs of people that are part of the DDoS attack, I'd send them up to my provider, and he would send it up to his upstream provider, etc until the traffic gets cut off as close as possible to the source. Everyone saves a lot of traffic and we're all happy, no? distributed denial of service attack. Storm, for instance, has somewhere between 5 and 500 thousand computers infected, scattered across the world. That is a lot of IPs to try to block in a short period of time. The 'source' is random computers from disparate ISPs located all over the world.
Do you really want these 'humans' mucking up your website anyway? If anything we should be looking for more difficult Captcha. Shame no one's figured out how to get a gom jabbar to work over the internet.
Has it ever been done before? I mean, just put together a wiki with templates available, and let folks fill them in with information required for each jurisdiction. It's not like they can file for restraining orders or anything to prevent it, because it is done by unassociated individuals.
They have a obligation to reply within a certain period of time, and there isn't much of a way they could actually do it. Massive numbers of jurisdictions and individual courts to deal with. I don't see how they could manage it, if they were all filed within a short period...
This seems like it would be a really effective method of dealing with companies that dick over their consumers.
Wouldn't it be more entertaining to introduce the ability for the clients to modify themselves(such as new methods of distribution and concealment) based on modules that could be distributed across the network.
Maybe eventually make modules that let it look for other malware, and replace the payload with itself(which would also be distributed around the network. Wouldn't need to be all that efficient or effective with a few hundred thousand computers running it. A success here or there would be fine...
I didn't think there was anything illegal about Van Eck phreaking and anyone who can see in your window from public property can legally see what is on your monitor.
So, yes, you actually do have a right to see what is on the screen of every CRT in your vicinity, provided you don't break other laws(trespassing for instance) in the process.
The hard part is getting it out of the country of origin, without it being linked to you as having "left" from you. The money is coming out of a black global economy, so you shouldn't really have to worry about getting the money out of the country. Just have the folks sending you the money send it directly to a country with friendly banking laws. You don't need to 'touch' it.
I think issues of hubris and karma are separate from the fact that it a ridiculous to allow someone to patent natural phenomena, and an orbit is just that. It's like allowing a company to patent a particularly efficient route driving from New York to Los Angeles.
In addition, how the hell could it be novel or non-obvious? Hell, prior art too, I'd think.
SES is a business, and their is more money in suing boeing and collecting and insurance check for the satellite. It's stupid and wasteful, and this mindset will lead to increased costs for satellite deployment(increased insurance costs for everyone as a result, and extra demand for limited resource for no god damned reason).
Luckly, unlike sex and drugs, there isn't a lot of social resistance to educating kids about the internet. Not giving out information about yourself online or believing people are who they claim isn't really a values issue, so it isn't likely to quite as bad as DARE or abstinence only sex-ed.
I'd rather see this stuff taught as a portion of a mandatory technological education program, so you give the kiddies more of the nuts and bolts stuff about computer and internet security too. You know, actually give the skills to be safe online rather than just a set of rules to follow backed only by fear mongering.
It's a shame that copyrights don't need to be defended universally to be enforced, like trademarks. Then, IP owners would be compelled to crack down sharply on their fans who produce fan fiction, and the 'genre' could be put out of commission forever. Sure they would be alienated and would probably stop even casual support of the products they once loved, but I wouldn't have to always know that, even though I don't read it, fan fiction is out there on the same internet as me.
Really? Perfectly on tens of thousands of computers?
hold on while I make some change.
More along the lines of 'vote for the worst', Senator Clinton has hung around longer than Sanjaya.
well, because this isn't the final step in the process, there is no real advantage to roof top, as it all has to get shipped out to a refinery and back (rather than photovoltic cells delivering power where it is needed.) Water is pretty heavy stuff anyway, and my POS roof need a fair bit of work before it would support an extra few tonnes(cubic meters) of water.
Don't know, but this doesn't seem like it would all that great a use of roof tops.
It's nice that Sun is open-sourcing Java. But it's also kind of funny/sad that only Sun would invent a hugely successful product, not make a dime on it, and yet keep it closed-sourced for 13 years.
So, they just default to installing the Google Toolbar with the jre because google kicks butt? I'm sure they have made a few dimes off of it.I'd rather people use the various encryption schemes built into bit torrent clients already, rather than letting the bad people win, and forcing me to download torrent where I can't tell what the actual content is and need to get the whole thing before I can check the quality.
Seriously man, screw that.
For example, if I (somehow) know the IPs of people that are part of the DDoS attack, I'd send them up to my provider, and he would send it up to his upstream provider, etc until the traffic gets cut off as close as possible to the source. Everyone saves a lot of traffic and we're all happy, no? distributed denial of service attack. Storm, for instance, has somewhere between 5 and 500 thousand computers infected, scattered across the world. That is a lot of IPs to try to block in a short period of time. The 'source' is random computers from disparate ISPs located all over the world.
Do you really want these 'humans' mucking up your website anyway? If anything we should be looking for more difficult Captcha. Shame no one's figured out how to get a gom jabbar to work over the internet.
This. DDoS Microsoft's legal department.
Has it ever been done before? I mean, just put together a wiki with templates available, and let folks fill them in with information required for each jurisdiction. It's not like they can file for restraining orders or anything to prevent it, because it is done by unassociated individuals.
They have a obligation to reply within a certain period of time, and there isn't much of a way they could actually do it. Massive numbers of jurisdictions and individual courts to deal with. I don't see how they could manage it, if they were all filed within a short period...
This seems like it would be a really effective method of dealing with companies that dick over their consumers.
Where's the fun in that?
Wouldn't it be more entertaining to introduce the ability for the clients to modify themselves(such as new methods of distribution and concealment) based on modules that could be distributed across the network.
Maybe eventually make modules that let it look for other malware, and replace the payload with itself(which would also be distributed around the network. Wouldn't need to be all that efficient or effective with a few hundred thousand computers running it. A success here or there would be fine...
Uhh... if you leave your router open, bad people can abuse it and can get you in trouble.
That's a good reason for you to lock down your router. It isn't a good reasons for me to not use it to check my e-mail.
I didn't think there was anything illegal about Van Eck phreaking and anyone who can see in your window from public property can legally see what is on your monitor.
So, yes, you actually do have a right to see what is on the screen of every CRT in your vicinity, provided you don't break other laws(trespassing for instance) in the process.
GiTS
GiTS Innocence
GITS:SAC:SSS(Ghost in the Shell:Stand Alone Complex:Solid State Society
How the hell is that plausibly deniable?
"That's a really nice translunar orbit you got there, it'd be a shame if anything happened to it."
I think issues of hubris and karma are separate from the fact that it a ridiculous to allow someone to patent natural phenomena, and an orbit is just that. It's like allowing a company to patent a particularly efficient route driving from New York to Los Angeles.
In addition, how the hell could it be novel or non-obvious? Hell, prior art too, I'd think.
SES is a business, and their is more money in suing boeing and collecting and insurance check for the satellite. It's stupid and wasteful, and this mindset will lead to increased costs for satellite deployment(increased insurance costs for everyone as a result, and extra demand for limited resource for no god damned reason).
the name you are looking for is LoJack. Most of the satellite systems, such as OnStar, do this as well.
But god has been proven as true as you can get by measuring.
Luckly, unlike sex and drugs, there isn't a lot of social resistance to educating kids about the internet. Not giving out information about yourself online or believing people are who they claim isn't really a values issue, so it isn't likely to quite as bad as DARE or abstinence only sex-ed.
I'd rather see this stuff taught as a portion of a mandatory technological education program, so you give the kiddies more of the nuts and bolts stuff about computer and internet security too. You know, actually give the skills to be safe online rather than just a set of rules to follow backed only by fear mongering.
Specist.
Not to slam Google, but would an "evil" corporation actually admit to doing evil?
Clearly you've never read a press release from Blackwater.I'm shocked, shocked, to hear it implied that there are LARPers who aren't getting any.
grand and a half a year?
Pretty sure I pay something like $120 per year for XM, which isn't all that bad considering how shitty terrestrial radio is.
Seems XM has cut it's price to less than 90% of what you think the cost is.
They many need better advertising though.
It's a shame that copyrights don't need to be defended universally to be enforced, like trademarks. Then, IP owners would be compelled to crack down sharply on their fans who produce fan fiction, and the 'genre' could be put out of commission forever. Sure they would be alienated and would probably stop even casual support of the products they once loved, but I wouldn't have to always know that, even though I don't read it, fan fiction is out there on the same internet as me.