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User: khasim

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  1. Mod parent up. on Google Launches Service To Replace Web Ads With Subscriptions · · Score: 3, Informative

    My first question is what needs to be allowed in order for this to work? Do I have to whitelist sites in adblock? NoScript? Do I have to abandon those addons?

    What about any of the anti-tracking stuff I use?

    And, lastly, the main reason I use all of that is because I got very tired of clicking on a site and WAITING FOR ALL THE SHIT TO LOAD AND RELOAD AND RERELOAD.

    I might use this. I might not. But there isn't enough information available right now to tell whether it will be better or worse for me than what I'm doing today.

  2. Alumni politics. on Harvard Students Move Fossil Fuel Stock Fight To Court · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There are, probably, several alumni who are employed by those companies who would not want to see the publicity of their high prestige alma mater taking a public stand against their business.

    Sorry, kids. Part of the attraction of Harvard is the business/political connections it gives you.

  3. Re:Why... on Court Shuts Down Alleged $120M Tech Support Scam · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My guess is that someone important was scammed OR the money got to the level of "important" for the banks. This has got to be one of the easiest things that the FBI could track and bust.

    A related question, though. As anyone who's ever done support knows, the average computer is awash with problems. How different would the situation have been if the scan had been real instead of a scam?

  4. How did your senator vote? on Republicans Block Latest Attempt At Curbing NSA Power · · Score: 5, Informative
  5. Re:Given how most spend their time in college... on Coding Bootcamps Presented As "College Alternative" · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One can fix an engine or even put it together the other designs it.

    I think that, in this case, it is more like someone trained to change your oil at one of those 5 minute places.

    Someone working there CAN move on to bigger things, but it won't be because that training taught them how.

  6. You are wrong, again. on Big Talk About Small Samples · · Score: 4, Insightful

    However, I still say it's correct that even on the basis of a small sample, you can rule out claims about the background population.

    You can say that but you are wrong.

    With a small, non-random sample you cannot say ANYTHING about anything.

    You reach in, grab a ball at random and pull it out, and see that it's red.

    Random is not the same as non-random.

    A small sample size that is random is NOT THE SAME as a small sample size that is non-random.

    It's trivially true that "any small sample is going to have some non-random attributes", but that doesn't mean the sample itself isn't random, ...

    Again, your sample was not random.

    No matter how many times you try to imply/claim that it was random, it was not random.

  7. Re:I am not reading that. on Big Talk About Small Samples · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some Slashdot commenters have shown that they need an article about basic statistics, more specifically what can be inferred even from a small sample.

    There are lots of people out there (and here) who do not understand basic statistics. Bennett Haselton is one of them.

    The FIRST problem is not the small sample set. It is that the small sample set is "some people on Amazon's Mechanical Turk who are willing to take a survey for $X". His sample set is flawed.

    And his home-written "survey" is also flawed.

    So his math is meaningless. Garbage-in, Garbage-out.

    In order to deal with the flaw in his sample set he'd have to have a much larger sample set. OR a properly selected sample set.

    THEN he'd need his "survey" re-written.

    And only then could he try his hand at the math. He hasn't even explained what his margin of error is or which method he used to calculate it. BECAUSE HE DOES NOT UNDERSTAND STATISTICS.

  8. Bullshit. on Comcast Kisses-Up To Obama, Publicly Agrees On Net Neutrality · · Score: 4, Informative

    Anyone who believes that buying private links into a providers network is the same as your traffic getting paid priority knows jack shit about network ops.

    The Fallacy of Equivocation.

    You've substituted the more specific network-jargon "priority" for the usage of "priority".

    Once Netflix PAID Comcast then Comcast gave Netflix PRIORITY access to the Comcast network. The PRIORITY access means bypassing the choke point that Netflix was previously restricted to.

    No one is saying that Comcast changed the QoS or priority of individual Netflix packets. But that is what you are denying.

    Now I'm sure a bunch of people (who are not network engineers) are going to argue over the wording and philosophy as to whether or not buying paid links into a providers network constitutes priority or not. It's not.

    Again, you are substituting a more specific network-jargon usage of "priority" that no one other than you is using.

    And you are denying something that no one else is claiming.

    That is the Fallacy of Equivocation.

    The only difference that buying direct links in meant was that they got to skip the congestion in the peering points.

    Which is what everyone, except you, is saying.

    Once Netflix paid Comcast, Comcast users could suddenly get better access to Netflix.

    But Comcast refused to do anything to address that congestion UNTIL NETFLIX PAID THEM.

  9. Re:First step is to collect data. on Ask Slashdot: How To Unblock Email From My Comcast-Hosted Server? · · Score: 2

    It is the only machine on the network that uses that IP.

    ON A WIRED WORKSTATION ON THAT NETWORK, go to http://www.whatismyip.com/ and see if the IP address it reports ends in .157.

    ON A WIRELESS DEVICE ON THAT NETWORK, do the same.

    This will tell you whether a machine on your network may be sending spam from the same address as your email server.

  10. Re:First step is to collect data. on Ask Slashdot: How To Unblock Email From My Comcast-Hosted Server? · · Score: 4, Informative

    The traffic coming from my server is so ridiculously small, that I was shocked to begin getting messages like these from those email providers.

    Not your server.

    Your network.

    Monitor the traffic going into or out-of your cable modem to see what is happening on outbound port 25 for that IP address. Do this for 24 hours.

    Move your mail server to a different IP address if that is possible. You have 5 addresses, right?

    The rejection messages are saying that YAHOO and HOTMAIL are seeing too many messages from your specific IP address.

    GMAIL is accepting the messages but flagging them as spam.

    It is extremely unlikely that three competing services are all using the same SMTP-blacklist (that they refuse to identify) to reject messages.

  11. Re:First step is to collect data. on Ask Slashdot: How To Unblock Email From My Comcast-Hosted Server? · · Score: 3, Informative

    So, in other words, both of these messages are crap and not accurate.

    They are similar messages from two different services. It is very unlikely that they are both claiming the same problem ... incorrectly.

    You've had those IP addresses for 2 years without problems so it probably is not a pre-existing issue with the IP addresses.

    Do you have a firewall that you can configure to monitor outbound port 25 attempts from your network? Or do you know how to use a sniffer such as Wireshark to do so?

    Or can you move your email server to one of the other IP addresses you have? And see if it is still blocked?

    Right now it is looking like the problem is on your network. Not Comcast and not GMAIL or YAHOO or HOTMAIL. I might be wrong. But if it were me, I'd test my network first. Otherwise, even if you do get through to YAHOO or HOTMAIL they'll look at the logs and say the same thing.

  12. Re:First step is to collect data. on Ask Slashdot: How To Unblock Email From My Comcast-Hosted Server? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Deferred: 421 4.7.0 [TS01] Messages from XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX temporarily deferred due to user complaints - 4.16.55.1; see

    That seems to indicate that at least one of your recipients at YAHOO is actively flagging your messages as spam. Maybe they have incorrectly written a rule that is doing so.

    Deferred: 421 4.7.1 [TS03] All messages from XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX will be permanently deferred; Retrying will NOT succeed.

    ... and ...

    Deferred: 421 RP-001 (BAY004-MC5F24) Unfortunately, some messages from XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX weren't sent. Please try again. We have limits for how many messages can be sent per hour and per day.

    And that one seems to be saying that your IP address is sending too many messages.

    How many messages per day are you sending?

  13. Re:First step is to collect data. on Ask Slashdot: How To Unblock Email From My Comcast-Hosted Server? · · Score: 2

    The code is what matters. Here's a site with a bit more info:
    http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3463

    If HOTMAIL is rejecting with one code but YAHOO is rejecting with a different code then there may be THREE issues for him to deal with.

    And since he is running a server he will most likely be using port 25. Encryption may change that. But for initial testing purposes he should skip encryption for HOTMAIL and YAHOO until he can determine why his messages are being rejected.

  14. First step is to collect data. on Ask Slashdot: How To Unblock Email From My Comcast-Hosted Server? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He's having problems with 3 services.

    1. GMAIL - messages accepted but marked as spam.

    2. YAHOO - messages rejected (what do the logs say?)

    3. HOTMAIL - messages rejected (what do the logs say?)

    So the first step is to look at the logs and see if the rejection message has any information in it. Do the rejection messages at YAHOO and HOTMAIL have the same code?

    The next step is to check with a service like http://www.dnsgoodies.com/ to make sure that Comcast has configured their side correctly. The reverse DNS should point to your domain. You DO have a domain, right?

    The more information you have before you contact Comcast, the better. Because the first 2 levels won't know anything about anything. They will be reading off of a script.

  15. Seconded. on Debunking a Viral Internet Post About Breastfeeding Racism · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Really. He's offended by a FACEBOOK posting.

    So he decides to write his own "survey" or whatever. Except he knows NOTHING about writing them. Or how to conduct them.

    And then he puts it up on Amazon's Mechanical Turk site. Further evidence that he knows NOTHING about conducting a survey.

    Which leads him to "analyize" the crap "data" that he has "collected".

    The only "News for Nerds" here is how badly this was done. Anyone who publishes is (that would be you, Timothy) is an idiot for doing so. If anyone else had conducted this at any other site it would have been mocked here.

  16. Re:If education could have worked ... on Report: Federal Workers, Contractors Behind Half of Government Cyber Breaches · · Score: 1

    Sure, there is a lot of less-than-competent admins out there, but a lot more of the problem is political rather than technical than most people realize.

    Yes. I think it is because the political issues stem from status battles. If you can overrule IT then you have more status.

    If you cannot overrule IT then you have less status than the nerds.

    And YOUR status, today, is worth more than the risk of someone else's life, possibly, sometime in the nebulous future.

    Particularly because you can still blame IT for not being able to deal with the situation. After all, isn't that their job. That's if they can even prove that it was your demands that caused a problem. Because all the other managers had the same demands.

    Anyone fired from Home Depot? Target? Any of the others?

  17. Re:ROFL on Canadian Police Recommend Ending Anonymity On the Internet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Fascism begins when the efficiency of the Government becomes more important than the Rights of the People.

    There are a lot of people out there who would like the world to be a bit more orderly. Even if there is a bit less freedom. As long as they're still at the top.

    Think of all the dictatorships and such that would love to be able to lock down the Internet like that. With the support of those Canadian politicians and police.

  18. If education could have worked ... on Report: Federal Workers, Contractors Behind Half of Government Cyber Breaches · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If education could have worked, it would have worked by now.

    So much for AI in doing anything useful in protecting systems, and it's not the overall workforce that needs educating ... it's the fucking gate keepers -- IT and software/hardware manufacturers.

    The problem is that even if the IT people are competent they have to be MORE competent than everyone who can attack them. Why does everything have to be connected to the Internet?

    And they have to that competent with the software/hardware that they're using. How many times has the purchasing decision been made before you've even been aware of the issue?

    Which leads to the issues that the software/hardware vendors have within their own companies. Ship today and we'll patch tomorrow. Got to get to market before the competition.

    And that isn't considering the problems that "management" at the company you work for keeps introducing. I cannot tell you how many times some executive simply had to have admin access on his laptop which resulted in massive infections being brought onto the network.

    Security is easy --- in theory.
    But it depends upon hundreds or thousands of decisions being made correctly. By people who have no incentive to protect the security of the systems you support.

  19. Re:About right on Report: Federal Workers, Contractors Behind Half of Government Cyber Breaches · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It doesn't even have to be that intentional. From TFA:

    They have clicked links in bogus phishing emails, opened malware-laden websites and been tricked by scammers into sharing information.

    One was redirected to a hostile site after connecting to a video of tennis star Serena Williams.

    People are usually the weakest link in a security system.

    And it does not sound like that security system is very well designed in the first place.

  20. Mod parent up. on Codecademy's ReSkillUSA: Gestation Period For New Developers Is 3 Months · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Technically, someone could be a "programmer" after only 3 months of work. More specifically, a "bad programmer".

    From TFA:

    And Sims said this effort was first "catalyzed" by conversations with the White House, particularly after US CTO (and former Googler) Megan Smithâ(TM)s comments about the talent gap and education. (To be clear, though, the White House isn't a partner in this program.)

    That kind of says it all right there.

    How about, instead, they put together a curriculum showing what an entry level programmer should know? Even if it takes more than 3 months to finish it all. And what the different sub-fields are in programming (kernel hacker, web site designer, database programmer, etc). Maybe you don't need so much math if you're going to be "coding" in HTML/CSS/scripting-language. But then you aren't going to be hitting the $80,000/year "average" that they claim.

  21. Maybe, maybe not. on Big Data Knows When You Are About To Quit Your Job · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm guessing that their "algorithm" is more like:

    X% change jobs after 1 year.
    Y% change jobs after 2 years.
    Z% change jobs after 3 years.
    etc.

    In my experience, people tend to change jobs because of something happening at their current job (or a personal/family situation change). And that's not something that can be predicted with any degree of accuracy.

  22. Re:latency doesn't matter for video, bw, jitter do on Net Neutrality Alone Won't Solve ISP Throttling Abuse, Here's Why · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Latency is usually the first problem. You'll have trouble when you're running up against the speed of light.

    But you can usually run a 2nd pipe to add bandwidth. With the same latency as the 1st pipe. And a 3rd pipe. And so on.

    And that's where I think TFA gets it wrong. Network Neutrality cannot be about prioritizing one kind of traffic over another. The ISP's already lack the incentive to add more bandwidth. Even though that bandwidth is what they are selling. Allowing them to prioritize traffic means that they will be more incentivized to NOT add more bandwidth.

    That was the problem that Netflix had with Comcast. And once Netflix coughed up some money, Comcast instantly found more bandwidth.

  23. If control is possible. on Computer Scientists Say Meme Research Doesn't Threaten Free Speech · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think that what they will "find" is nothing more than certain criteria all have to be above a certain "threshold" and then the meme goes viral.

    But those criteria will all be comprised of humans. Which they will NOT be able to predict.

    Even if one meme goes viral in a certain group there will be no way to force a different meme to go viral with that same group in that same fashion.

    Although I am looking forward to the names of the units of measure that they will be applying to their research. :) How many milli-LULZ before it goes viral?

  24. Mod parent up. on American Express Seeks To Swap Card Numbers For Secure Tokens · · Score: 2

    Great idea. And there are many different ways of doing this.

    The core concept is to generate a unique ID for each transaction that links:
    a. the vendor
    b. the customer
    c. the customer's bank
    d. (maybe also the vendor's bank)
    e. a specific amount
    f. a specific time.
    And being unique, it will never be used again. We have a lot of different ways to do that.

    With that information, the bank should be able to flag questionable transactions that get past the customer verification. Or at least warn the customer if the vendor has an unusually large number of "problems" reported.

  25. Two things. on Reactions To Disgusting Images Predict a Persons Political Ideology · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First:

    Eighty-three healthy individuals (males/females = 41/42; age = 18â"62; mean [SD] = 29.0 [11.3] years) in Roanoke and Blacksburg, VA, area were recruited ...

    Second:

    They also completed a survey about their political beliefs, which included questions about their attitudes toward school prayer, gun control, immigration, and gay marriage.

    So what would the results be if the recruits were from a more "Liberal" country?

    That is the problem with these "studies". DO NOT look in your backyard for cases that support your bias. Look for cases that contradict your bias. Even if you have to look at the people in other countries. Particularly countries where there is less focus on the items that are controversial in the USofA.