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User: boristdog

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Comments · 1,050

  1. Re:Put in a separate table on Oracle Database Redaction Trivial To Bypass, Says David Litchfield · · Score: 1

    Ideally, the payment processor is the only one who has the hash, the merchant passes the hash they made from customer data on to the processor.
    The payment processor doesn't even need to have the CC#. They just need the hash.

  2. Re:Put in a separate table on Oracle Database Redaction Trivial To Bypass, Says David Litchfield · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, passwords, SSNs, PINs and Credit Card numbers should be hashed before inserting into any table. There is NO reason for anyone to save that data unhashed.

    To compare data, just hash what the customer enters and compare the hashes. Why is this so hard for 99.9% of companies to understand?

  3. Re:Obvious on Fooling a Mercedes Into Autonomous Driving With a Soda Can · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unfortunately, lane keeping and distance keeping are skills that elude a lot of drivers.

  4. Brillo-iant! on Quiet Cooling With a Copper Foam Heatsink · · Score: 5, Funny

    And you can keep the pots and pans clean!

  5. Re:Why do you want pieces of plastic on Netflix Reduces Physical-Disc Processing, Keeps Prices the Same · · Score: 1

    Yeah, screw all those farmers and ranchers and small town folks! They only provide all our food and stuff, why do they need movies?

    News flash: Internet speeds more than a few miles from urban development usually suck donkey balls.

  6. Re:And now for the improperly spun article of the on Wearable Robot Adds Two Fingers To Your Hand · · Score: 4, Funny

    Sure, and have Spider man trying to kick your ass all the time?

  7. The Gripping Hand? on Wearable Robot Adds Two Fingers To Your Hand · · Score: 2

    I see that the kids at MIT have read their Niven.

  8. Re:Name on ChickTech Brings Hundreds of Young Women To Open Source · · Score: 1

    I actually had a business called "rent a nerd" in the early 90's when I was in my mid 20's and in great shape. I got lots of repeat calls from lonely divorced women to fix very simple "problems" with their computers. e.g. Problem: "My screen is blank!" Solution: "Turn up the brightness knob" | Problem: "My software won't load!" Solution: "You have to run the install.exe program, not the readme.txt"

    If I hadn't had a girlfriend and/or a conscience at the time I would have made even more money. I did get a lot of free sandwiches & beverages, and got to see a lot of low-neckline shirts.

  9. Re:Awesome! on 'Hidden From Google' Remembers the Sites Google Is Forced To Forget · · Score: 1

    Especially David St. Hubbins.

  10. Re:Have another trophy! on Homestar Runner To Return Soon · · Score: 1

    I bought a "Kick the Cheat" for my wife when they first came out.

    It was amazing fun to kick while the batteries lasted. The Cheat would yell and curse when you kicked it across the room.

  11. Re:Or, you know on Coddled, Surveilled, and Monetized: How Modern Houses Can Watch You · · Score: 1

    For you maybe. I live out in the country in a house I built myself. No city councils, no neighborhood associations, no nothin'. The wife and I sit on the porch naked and smoke weed while enjoying the sunset over the hills damn near every evening.

    Enjoy your city livin', kids.

  12. Or, you know on Coddled, Surveilled, and Monetized: How Modern Houses Can Watch You · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You could just live in a regular house without all that crap.

  13. Yeah on Goldman Sachs Demands Google Unsend One of Its E-mails · · Score: 5, Funny

    Barbara Striesand never returns my e-mails either.

  14. Re:Fox News? on IRS Recycled Lerner Hard Drive · · Score: 1

    Never attribute to malice that which may be caused by incompetence.

    I worked for the IRS for 6 years. It is a huge, bloated bureaucracy and everyone is afraid of it so no one messes with it. We lost data all the time, which was a boon to people who owed money based on that data. Honestly, there was more fucking going on amongst the people in the office than actual work. It was the land of office affairs.

  15. Re:Most qualified and motivated candidates? on Yahoo's Diversity Record Is Almost As Bad As Google's · · Score: 1

    Women who prevail and succeed have a property similar to many men. They know what they want to do, and do not care what society, or Barbie, or fashion magazines think. And they are willing to do what it takes. My wife, the model of an Alpha female, is this way. The successful female techs, engineers, and scientists where I worked were this way.

    You just described my network engineer wife. She doesn't give a crap about doing girly things. Awesome cook and a sex machine though. I'm a lucky SOB.

  16. Re:Most qualified and motivated candidates? on Yahoo's Diversity Record Is Almost As Bad As Google's · · Score: 4, Informative

    My wife changed careers 10 years ago from teacher to network engineer. She tries VERY HARD to get other women insterested in going into tech fields. She has oodles of money from her job, while all her female friends make less than half what she makes. But none of her friends or relations are even remotely interested in changing their career, even though they all complain about not making enough money.

    Hell, I try to get more women interested in the tech fields all the time to no avail. I've even gone to career days at local high-schools to try to get women interested in tech careers. Last time I interviewed a woman for a programmer-trainee job she decided she wanted to do something else after we offered her the job, she didn't even try it.

    So the problem seems to be pretty cultural. Even with someone offering to mentor them, most women (based on my limited sample) have little or no interest in the tech fields. And these are all smart, educated women. I imagine we really need to change the way we bring up girls if we want to fix the situation.

    So it will remain a sausage fest wherever I work until I retire, I guess.

  17. Re:Really? on Average HS Student Given Little Chance of AP CS Success · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How about "Positive parental involvement" then?

  18. Re:yup, its true (for me) on Americans Hate TV and Internet Providers More Than Other Industries · · Score: 1

    I'll take "The big companies that most people deal with at home for 400, Alex"

  19. He probably only needs 640K in his computer, too on Should Tesla Make Batteries Instead of Electric Cars? · · Score: 4, Funny

    I mean, these electric car thingys are just a fad, right?

  20. Re:Monolith! on The Shrinking Giant Red Spot of Jupiter · · Score: 2

    I haven't heard that since I did a nickle in Leavenworth.

  21. Re:right to be forgotten on Pedophile Asks To Be Deleted From Google Search After European Court Ruling · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking there will eventually be a "statute of limitations" for data. Anything more than X years old can be requested for removal.

  22. Re:Which one? on You've Got Male: Amazon's Growth Impacting Seattle Dating Scene · · Score: 1

    My wife changed from teaching school to becoming a network engineer about 8 years ago. She went from making 40% of my income to making 95% of it in the past 8 years time, and that's with about 30% increase in my income in that time.

    She is treated like a professional and doesn't have to deal with the parents of her clients. Yes, there are a lot of clueless "Durr, she's a girl!" nerds that she has to deal with, but she says they are easier to handle than her former students.

    So if you are a woman and you are AT ALL interested in technology, get into the tech field anywhere. We're in Austin but it is lucrative no matter where you go. And you will have your pick of well-employed male suitors if you so desire.

  23. Re:Electric. on Future of Cars: Hydrogen Fuel Cells, Or Electric? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Then one day somebody discovers this awesome substance called gasoline that has so much more energy

    Do you honestly think that if we didn't have gasoline powered cars already ANY company could get a tank full of gallons of a highly volatile and explosive liquid put under the back seat of a car (where the CHILDREN sit) approved by ANY government agency? Sure, it's fine for daredevils and stuntmen, but you would be thrown in the looney bin for even suggesting that families use it for daily transportation.

  24. Re:Good to go with minimal competence. on Ask Slashdot: Minimum Programming Competence In Order To Get a Job? · · Score: 1

    I consider myself minimally competent, but most programmers I meet don't seem to be as skilled as I am.

  25. Re:Thou shalt not kill. on UN to Debate Use of Fully Autonomous Weapons, New Report Released · · Score: 1

    Will these killbot have pre-set kill limits?