This page at the ArsDigita site still lists Greenspun as chairman. I guess it's too much for a Web content company to correctly list its chairman in its own Web content?-)
I guess one of the 29 people they laid off was the guy that updates their website.:-)
The article says that the virus is licensed under the GPL, so doesnt that mean it should infect all your executables with the source code as well, since the GPL states that you should be able to get the source in the same manner that you get the binaries.
Re:guessing a tcp sequence isnt *THAT* hard...
on
Security Hole In TCP
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· Score: 2
Interesting ports on boris.ST.HMC.Edu (134.173.xxx.xxx):
You know... if you're gonna mask out the ip, better mask out the host name as well cause DNS doesnt lie! (Well, usually it doesn't)
and you can hear the satanic messages that NASA has hidden in it!
Offer EULA on the web.
on
EULA In Games
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· Score: 2
What if software companies would offer a copy of their EULA on their website for a given software title? Then you could read and review it before making a purchase. Would this alleviate some (or all) of the concerns about having to agree to a shrink-wrap license? Maybe even put a text link on the box saying where you can review the license.
This page at the ArsDigita site still lists Greenspun as chairman. I guess it's too much for a Web content company to correctly list its chairman in its own Web content?-)
:-)
I guess one of the 29 people they laid off was the guy that updates their website.
The article says that the virus is licensed under the GPL, so doesnt that mean it should infect all your executables with the source code as well, since the GPL states that you should be able to get the source in the same manner that you get the binaries.
Interesting ports on boris.ST.HMC.Edu (134.173.xxx.xxx):
You know... if you're gonna mask out the ip, better mask out the host name as well cause DNS doesnt lie! (Well, usually it doesn't)
Next they'll be touting that the Department of Justice threatens the "American Way" (or at least M$'s version of it.)
and you can hear the satanic messages that NASA has hidden in it!
What if software companies would offer a copy of their EULA on their website for a given software title? Then you could read and review it before making a purchase. Would this alleviate some (or all) of the concerns about having to agree to a shrink-wrap license? Maybe even put a text link on the box saying where you can review the license.
I guess that means we should start adding a humans.txt file to our sites that tell people what they are allowed to read and remember.