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User: L4t3r4lu5

L4t3r4lu5's activity in the archive.

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  1. Re:social interaction on Workplace Surveillance Becoming More Common · · Score: 4, Funny

    You there! Stop talking! Eyes back on the computer screen!

    Ha ha! Jokes on them. I can zone out and do nothing for hours while looking at a screen full of code.

    Dude... http://hackertyper.net/

    You're welcome.

  2. Re:It is only the tool... on Workplace Surveillance Becoming More Common · · Score: 1

    I think that if a lady is able to leave her genitals on the bar while she goes for a pee, she has more to worry about than rape.

  3. Re:People assume they're watched. on Workplace Surveillance Becoming More Common · · Score: 1

    Inappropriate content, including pornography, should be blocked in schools, if not for the fact that it's inappropriate then because it's also likely that the site hosts malware (You don't think they make their money from those advertisements, do you?). Yes, you can get around the blocks if you are so able and willing to put in the effort, but that would also show intent.

    Still, we all know zero-tolerance is moronic. I just hope the teacher was incompetent; He's likely now unemployable within his chosen career. It would be a shame if the school lost talent.

  4. Re:Another another delay? on SpaceX Delays Falcon 9 Launch To Tuesday · · Score: 2

    I can think of much worse days out than sitting in the sun with an ice-box of chilled beverages, snacks, and the guarantee that at least 10% of the people present also brought their Magic decks.

    Of cource, there's also the chance you'll see a rocket launch.

  5. Re:Not the Big Bang on Big Bang Breakthrough Team Back-Pedals On Major Result · · Score: 1

    Get ready for a shitty science analogy. Someone please chime in if this is just plain wrong.

    You are sat on a boat in a pool, with a motor capable of pushing it at 5m/s, and this is the only force applicable to the boat because physics. You cannot observe anything outside of the boat's speed in the water; There is only you, the boat, and the water. Now, put a current in the water of 50m/s in the direction of travel of the boat. How fast is the boat going? You can't know anything about the speed of the water, so you think you're going 0.5m/s, and you are going 0.5m/s relative to the water. However, the water isn't subject to the same laws as you, and you'll figure that out once you've discovered a way to measure speed outside the boat.

  6. Re:Reckless on EFF To Unveil Open Wireless Router For Open Wireless Movement · · Score: 1

    I understand your position. However, you are the minority. Most of the tech world are now young people with careers, families, and bills to pay. Risking prison on an ideology, especially one with which they aren't totally familiar, is just reckless.

    Without meaning to sound harsh, it sounds as though you've got nothing left to lose, and in this kind of situation that is a definite boon; such people are nigh on unstoppable. However, a father of two young children dragged through the courts on CP charges and found not guilty, reported in the corporate press as a "lack of evidence", will likely result in the ruined lives of everyone in the family. It's just too big a risk for most.

  7. Re:Doesn't this violate TOS? on EFF To Unveil Open Wireless Router For Open Wireless Movement · · Score: 1

    They aren't my parents, they aren't the government, they aren't the police. They're service providers.

    No, it's a private company with which you have a contract, part of which is that you will not open access to their service to a third party. You are breaching your contract, and they can terminate your agreement at least, sue you for it at worst.

    I run a Tor relay 24/7 on my connection, so I'm sort of in the same boat as you. I'm under no misconception, however, that this breaches the terms of my contract. I'd be happy for the situation you refer to above, where internet service is provided as a utility, but we're not there yet.

  8. Re:unions are needed before the bathroom break tim on Workplace Surveillance Becoming More Common · · Score: 1

    Nobody will be fired for talking about unions. They will be performance managed out of the position over a period of months.

    The only place where you can't easily be fired is the public sector, and that's why they pay so badly.

  9. Re:It is only the tool... on Workplace Surveillance Becoming More Common · · Score: 1

    A friend of mine once said "There are two types of people in the world; Those who keep important things with them, and those who lose things." Leave your stuff lying around, expect to lose it. It's been that way since the concept of property was defined.

  10. Re:True value on Mt. Gox CEO Returns To Twitter, Enrages Burned Investors · · Score: 1

    Yes they are. If you can receive $1 for one coin, the coins are worth $1 each. If someone else offers you 70c per coin, and your friend doesn't want to buy any more, they're now worth 70c. Congratulations; You've just discovered commodity trading!

    The difference between your coin and the dollar, though, is that the government accepts dollars as a means of paying your taxes, making it fiat money If the governemtn started accepting your tin coin as payment, it would be assigned a value by the government, backed by the treasury. You would then have created money, instead of tradeable goods.

  11. Re:Dangerous on Harley-Davidson Unveils Their First Electric Motorcycle · · Score: 1

    White helmet, hi-vis vest, ride with your lights on. You can't see any of those things while you're riding, so it doesn't matter how "cool" you look.

    Nobody looks "cool" doing 35MPH over a car bonnet.

  12. Re:The build quality on Harley-Davidson Unveils Their First Electric Motorcycle · · Score: 1

    There is no finesse anywhere on the typical H-D, just lots and lots of chromed steel.

    Got to have something to polish, aside from their ego, and their... Ahem... Helmet.

  13. Re:Dangerous on Harley-Davidson Unveils Their First Electric Motorcycle · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but people without a functioning liver will probably take one with a little mileage on it. In fact, they'd probably take half of one.

  14. Re:Nice looking bike... on Harley-Davidson Unveils Their First Electric Motorcycle · · Score: 1

    People need to learn that defensive driving doesn't mean "driving like a pansy". It means being observant of your surroundings, and watching for things other drivers would miss, e.g. Parked cars with turned wheels may pull out, looking for reflections in windows to see around obscured objects etc. Driving defensively is not riding the ass of the car in front, not accelerating hard to beat the lights, paying attention to the road conditions in the distance as well as immediately in front of you.

    Hell, they should just call it "driving"; There's nothing defensive about it.

  15. Re:Lawyer on Ask Slashdot: How To Bequeath Sensitive Information? · · Score: 1

    Encrypt and checksum the data you give to your attourney. Give your friend / recipient of the data the checksum to check for tampering, and the key to decrypt the data transfered to them by the attourneys. You now need only trust your friend.

  16. Re:Not as original as they claim on It's Not a Car, It's a Self-Balancing Electric Motorcycle (Video) · · Score: 1
  17. Re:Really? on Mt. Gox CEO Returns To Twitter, Enrages Burned Investors · · Score: 1

    Nobody cares if a credit card is skimmed. That's oney belonging the credit card company that's been stolen; You're not liable. They either reclaim the money from the vendor, or they get it covered by insurance.

    This is why you should always use a credit card for large purchases, even in part, and when purchasing online. Not only do you have whatever protections you receive from local legislation, you also have the extra protection of the credit card company. It's UK law, but check out Section 75 Consumer Credit Act 1974 There are other protections for fraudulent transactions.

  18. Re:Put it on a disc on Ask Slashdot: How To Bequeath Sensitive Information? · · Score: 1

    Why not just browse the adult web from an encrypted VM? Not only are you keeping your proclivities hidden, you're also protecting your system from the myriad of exploits pushed through these particular websites.

  19. Re:If you get the NSL, can you consult your attorn on TrueCrypt Author Claims That Forking Is Impossible · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How would you know it was genuine without consulting a legal professional? I can download the NSA logo from Google Images, find their address from Wikipedia, and write "You should stop doing this thing or we'll invite you to stay at Guantanamo Bay Care Home for the Politically Undesirable. Oh, and where I said 'invite you to stay at' replace it with 'put you in a 4' x 2' x 2' hold-all and ship you freight to'."

    Someone should start sending fakes to random US addresses, just to see what happens.

  20. Re:Rewrites Suck on TrueCrypt Author Claims That Forking Is Impossible · · Score: 1

    If we're going to re-write it, do we continue with the ongoing audit? Do we hold back on paying for more testing so we can audit the re-write?

  21. Re:whistling on IRS Recycled Lerner Hard Drive · · Score: 1

    I know of at least one Russell Group university which archives email into local PST files. I suppose I should expect more from a government department, but then I remembered it was a government department ;)

  22. Re:whistling on IRS Recycled Lerner Hard Drive · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The question to ask is: Did the drive get destroyed prior to a retention order being issued?

    If so, then that's SOP; Dead hardware is recycled.

    If not, someone goes to jail.

  23. Re:That's not a backup on Code Spaces Hosting Shutting Down After Attacker Deletes All Data · · Score: 1

    Not necessarily. I have a very limited budget, but even I manage to have both online and offline backup. There is a weekly full backup of all data and daily incremental backups to NAS devices on the network. Monday of every week, I copy the full backup done over the weekend to an encrypted USB drive and take it home. Two of these drives rotated weekly ensures there's always a backup off site, and it being encrypted satisfies data protection requirements. On-line backup is good for file recovery, off-line if there's a serious disaster.

    The whole lot costs less than £1000 including software, and isn't particularly complicated. I don't see any reason for this kind of breach to cause loss of so much data unless there were some extremely incompetent people involved.

  24. Re:Last Ubisoft game I will ever buy on Was Watch Dogs For PC Handicapped On Purpose? · · Score: 1

    You seem to be knowledgable on low-latency computing. Have you considered a RAMdrive instead of an SSD for your page file, temp directory etc, or disabling swapping altogether? I've not used a swap file since Windows XP; Keeping my background tasks few and necessary only has become habit.

  25. Re:Speculation... on NADA Is Terrified of Tesla · · Score: 1

    To beat a salesman, you just need to know what you want, how much you'll pay for it, and be willing to walk away if they say no or try anything funny.

    "Hi. I am out today to look at compact cars with decent mixed use fuel economy, a comfortable ride, automatic gearbox, and a few extras like heated front windscreen and heated seats, and iPod connectivity, and steering controls for the stereo. I have ready access to $XX,XXX; You have 15 minutes to talk to whomever you need to for this to happen. If you've not agreed to it by then, I'm driving the 150 yards to the next dealership. Clock's ticking!"