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User: TheGratefulNet

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  1. Re:class act on Julian Assange Trying To Raise Nearly $200k For a Statue of Himself · · Score: 2

    a large wooden badger was considered, but then rejected.

  2. Re:ok..what if i don't have one? on Are the TSA's New Electronic Device Screenings Necessary? · · Score: 1

    tl;dr: only carry burners (burner phones, burner laptops, burner audio players).

    gotcha.

    done and done.

  3. Re:Password protect your phone on Canadian Supreme Court Rules In Favor of Warrantless Cellphone Searches · · Score: 1

    you can't be serious, can you?

    don't you realize that cops have magic usb cables to unlock data on any commercial phone sold in the world in the last 5+ yrs?

    your little 'lock screen' gets laughed at. calea also laughs at your 'concept of privacy' that you THINK you have, but really don't.

    one poster did have a semi-good idea: keep your phone turned off and locked in the trunk inside another item that is locked. if its on on you, its under a different catagory (if I understand correctly) and so the threshold of them just barging in is higher, for such things.

    "no, I do not give consent to a search of my locked trunk."

    that's all you say. of course, they will do what they want, but if there is a dash cam watching them and it happens to NOT go 'missing' later on, this will help you once you get to court.

    remember: 'you may be able to beat the rap, but you can't beat the ride'. you cant fight with the guy there, but hopefully, you may have evidence that will help you later, once you are in public, inside the 'safety' of a courtroom.

  4. Re:Uh huh on In Iowa, a Phone App Could Serve As Driver's License · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and.... we're done here.

    (yes, this is obviously the motive; get people used to handing over their phones to cops, already unlocked.)

    they must think we are all stupid.

    (and I guess, with over half of us, they are probably right) ;(

  5. Re:Blame Canada! on Canadian Supreme Court Rules In Favor of Warrantless Cellphone Searches · · Score: 3, Insightful

    except: in modern times, the bad and good guys have sort of switched roles!

    I consider most authority figures to be bad-guys or soon-to-be bad guys. power corrupts. period! so much power today for authoritarians, its guaranteed they will turn bad. no doubt at all in my mind. and look what we have, today, in our 'law enforcement' word! just read the news for a few weeks and you'll get a sample of the topsy-turvey world we now live in.

    "dont talk to cops" is a modern thing. it never used to be that way when I was growing up, but it sure as hell is a 'thing' now!

    that's just one example of the 'new normal' we find ourselves in.

    I really don't worry about terrorists or other boogeymen. but I do worry about thugs with deadly force and some random thing that would cause them to put MY LIFE at risk for some utter bullshit reason or power-trip.

    I don't need protection from the so-called bad guys. I would, however, like protection against the so-called good guys. and that's what our body of laws USED TO BE ABOUT.

    checks and balances are non-existant, now-adays.

    (unless you're rich and powerful, of course).

  6. Re:Simple: enable your password on Canadian Supreme Court Rules In Favor of Warrantless Cellphone Searches · · Score: 2

    there's no brute-force needed.

    the carriers and phone makers are all REQUIRED by calea (in the US) to have backdoors on anything that has a 'network' aspect to it.

    plain and simple. they have magic usb cables that get into your phone. if you bought your phone (and not built it) then they have backdoors into it. this is pretty well known by geeks, is it not?

  7. Re:So let's carry burner phones ... on Canadian Supreme Court Rules In Favor of Warrantless Cellphone Searches · · Score: 1

    for a long time, this IS what I did. I left mine at home and chose not to risk having my privacy invaded by thugs-with-badges.

    any commercial phone that you buy, the thugs can connect a 'magic usb cable' to and get into your phone. the carriers and vendors all succumbed to the LEOs and allow this.

    but - I've seen some diy arduino (very minimalist) phones using some off the shelf gsm modules. you could, very likely, be able to create one and make it so that if there is a 'tamper' trigger, it would delete all local data (or simply just not KEEP any local data, ever).

    how much do you want to bet that if you did such a thing, they'd be so pissed off, they'd synthesize a fake reason to arrest you over it? maybe 'interfering with an investigation' or 'destruction of evidence' or some other bullshit. it would really piss them off and they would want to throw as much book at you as they could. but at least, they would not get the keys to your kingdom, so to speak.

    way too much info is stored on phones, these days. I wonder if we should really reconsider this idea. the bad guys (with badges) are the enemy in the war on privacy and they have all the power they need to fuck you over, if they so choose. I'm really not sure I want to hand over all my personal data for, essentially, no reason at all.

    maybe its time to get rid of the smart phone and go back to bone-stupid dumb phones.

    the very idea of some low-IQ thug going thru my personal info on a fishing expo - such a thing could not be more against the very concept of a free society!

    I know this is about canada, but we have seen countless examples of LEOs going thru your property without any valid legal reason other than 'they can get away with it'. this is NOT what the creators of our free society (and theirs) had in mind!

  8. the tl;dr version on Canadian Supreme Court Rules In Favor of Warrantless Cellphone Searches · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "look, we have the might to do what we want, and we WANT to invade your privacy. for power-mongers like us, this is what we live for and thrive on. its why we, as bullies-with-badges, got into this field! don't take our fun away. plus, well, THINKOFTHECHILDREN and BEAFRAIDOFTERRORISTS."

    that's it, in a nutshell. the elephant in the room that no one wants to bring up.

  9. Re:Definitely a neat little board. on $35 Quad-core Hacker SBC Offers Raspberry Pi-like Size and I/O · · Score: 1

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/produ...

    $15 or less, plays audio at up to 96k (does not support 88k, though, but does support 44/48/96 and full 24bit). what's cool is that its driverless (UAC1 mode) and has opto digi out!

    screw hdmi audio. full of drm. go with spdif and free your audio stream! ;)

  10. Re:XBMC Finally? on $35 Quad-core Hacker SBC Offers Raspberry Pi-like Size and I/O · · Score: 1

    I work on both arduino and the pi.

    the arduino is IP-less. its not good at ipstack things. its great at fast looping for device control.

    pi can do the looping on devices AND has a good ip stack with webserver, ipchains, etc.

    neither have much cpu but both have their place. when I want to play with IoT stuff and web-serve sensor data, the pi is the best thing for that.

    I also have a pi being a stratum-1 gps/pps timeserver. cost very little and yet I have a very highly accurate ntpserver at home, just for fun and grins.

  11. Re:Dear USA, good riddance on CIA Lied Over Brutal Interrogations · · Score: 2

    except: 99% of the american citizens are blameless in this!

    we don't own our own country anymore. corps have more rights than people and they control the government. the government fights for corps and for itself. it cares nothing about us. NOTHING!

    and so, you would blame the citizens who don't even have any control over their out-of-control government? how rational is THAT?

    I understand you are annoyed and upset by this. I am too - and am a born-and-raised US citizen. this makes me sick, but I realize its not the people who have done this but those in power. you know, the psychopaths.

    solution: throw the psychos in jail, stop trying to police the fucking whole planet and maybe over the next few decades, people will stop thinking that the whole US is fucked up.

    you really can't blame the people of any country. almost always, its the psychos who rule the country that are to blame.

    please keep that in mind.

  12. Re:Really? on CIA Lied Over Brutal Interrogations · · Score: 1

    I always thought a hot stake was much better than a cold chop...

    (*nyuk* ^3)

  13. Re:If foreign governments read my private emails.. on Microsoft To US Gov't: the World's Servers Are Not Yours For the Taking · · Score: 2

    well, there's always mastercharge and bank americard.

    (wait - what year is this, again?)

  14. Re:LOL on Displaced IT Workers Being Silenced · · Score: 2

    I know that in the bay area, employment is HARD to get (if you are not an h1b, not young and you were born here). they really look for any reason to not hire you, at that point. and if they did do some research on your name and a suit came up against a company, for any reason at all, I'm 100% sure that you'd not hear the reason, but you'd be marked as 'not a cultural fit' and you would not get that job. or the next. or the next.

    is it worth that risk?

    do you want to leave your field? I don't. I'm too old to start all over again and have too much invested in my field.

    they have us.

    the simple fact that we are not union and we have no collective power means we are at their mercy.

    if you don't see it, its because you are probably still a 'golden child' and are in demand. once you get over 35, things change and you are no longer the GC. if there is any dirt on you, you won't get the jobs you want.

    they know this. most of us know this. and it won't change for as long as we stay independant and refuse to be a collective (ie, union). I understand unions have a bad rep but the alternative - in the IT field - is having essentially no power.

    I was cocky when I was young. boy did I learn, though! wish I knew then what I knew now (isn't that always the case?)

  15. Re:Very cool. on Samsung SSD 850 EVO 32-Layer 3D V-NAND-Based SSD Tested · · Score: 1

    sadly, m-sata is going away. and there are not many choices for msata drives right now, either.

    m.2 is the new hotness. buying msata is probably not smart since next year's systems (and future) won't have msata.

    I hate it, but this is how things are.

  16. Re:LOL on Displaced IT Workers Being Silenced · · Score: 4, Insightful

    how often do you hear of companies shit-canning your resume if you are found out (public record) that you sued an employer OVER ANYTHING, even valid complaints?

    right, you don't hear of it.

    the real shit in this world is never reported. but its been like that forever; its how mankind works (or, fails to work, in this regard).

    the one law of the jungle: if you can get away with it, you can get away with it; especially if you are big and can lay down a serious smackdown to challengers.

    there is no other justice than this, in the world. those with power, get away with shit and you and I have essentially no say. we take whatever crumbs come our way.

    sad, but if you think about it honestly, its what we have in this world.

    reporters? since when does the news report real news? since when does the news challenge those in authority? not since the past 20 yrs, since 'news' is now part of the entertainment and profit-centers of tv (newspapers are nearly dead, btw).

  17. Re:Come on people, on Cisco Slaps Arista Networks With Suit For "Brazen" Patent Infringement · · Score: 1

    ob disc: I work at cisco (right now, at least).

    yes, their docs suck. reason: they hire cut-rate 'writers' from india who can't write to save their lives. things are rushed here (like everywhere), there is no time or money for proofreading and experts don't do reviews (again, this is everywhere). the writers are left on their own, mostly, and they have tight schedules.

    tl;dr: its all about money and cisco does not care about writers or manuals. I could find at least a typo on every other page, these days. sigh ;(

  18. Re:Come on people, on Cisco Slaps Arista Networks With Suit For "Brazen" Patent Infringement · · Score: 1

    cisco owns the cli (has for nearly 20 yrs now). its the industry standard cli, like it or not.

    you HAVE to do the cli a-la cisco if you want in, in the networking biz.

    everyone (other than jnpr) does it and for good reason.

    now, copying the manual is a bit too much; but the cli is fair game and it was smart to use the cisco cli style.

  19. Re:Meh. on New Virus Means Deadlier Flu Season Is Possible · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But death rate aside - who wants to be laid up in bed for a week with fever and body aches?

    with or without pay?

    (I'm serious, actually. as a contractor, I get no sick time off (paid) and so each time I get sick, I have to think if its worth losing a day's pay vs infecting others at work. lose/lose. welcome to the new normal for emplo^H^H^H^H^Hworkers.)

  20. google's statement on https on The Cost of the "S" In HTTPS · · Score: 2

    https://www.imperialviolet.org...

    in short, there is no cpu overhead anymore, in today's compute systems. https is not a barrier due to processing, at least.

  21. Re:Sounds good to me on The Cost of the "S" In HTTPS · · Score: 1

    in a corp network, you usually have laptops that are gen'd by the corp IT guys. that means - 99.9% of the time - they come pre-installed with evil certs. and a firewall that is surely a mitm node along your path.

    10 yrs ago (or more) I was interviewing for netmgt jobs (this being my main field) and they were all about sniffing, dpi and mitm bullshit. really turned me off! but those were the jobs 10 yrs ago and they have not changed, over time. netmgt is still more about spying, these days, than true netmgt.

    btw, when I run a vpn tunnel on my comcast home system, comcast routinely disconnects me after a few hours. I have to actually reboot the docsis modem to get a new connection. this only happens when I run a vpn and run lots of download traffic thru it. that really pisses them off and they have some kind of auto job that kills my connection dead. can't ping my default router. farking bastiges! but I have a workaround, so they don't get to win this round...

  22. Re:Setting aside that old Constitution on 18th Century Law Dredged Up To Force Decryption of Devices · · Score: 1

    you have zero idea what a 'progressive' really is.

    progress is when you abandon bronze age concepts (bible, etc) and accept science and modern ideas.

    the R's are as anti-progress as you can get. the D's talk a good game but they are still corp-owned and only slightly better than the R's.

    neither one has shown any 'progressive' tendancies for decades.

    I WISH we had progressives, but what we have are regressives who want us to 'return to the good old days' of down-home religion, racism and separation of the rich class from everyone else (even more so than we already have).

  23. Re:5th Admendment? on 18th Century Law Dredged Up To Force Decryption of Devices · · Score: 1

    I believe he crossed the street.

    you'd have to ask him why, though.

  24. they must hate cash, too on MasterCard Rails Against Bitcoin's (Semi-)Anonymity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    since that's the ultimate anon payment system.

    of course, we know what's going on. they hate having to compete against another company.

    poor babies!

  25. Re:Ads on Google Launches Service To Replace Web Ads With Subscriptions · · Score: 2

    I like the idea of micropayments.

    however, I don't trust google to manage this. they ONLY do evil, these days, disguised as good.

    if google is part of it, I want no part of it. sorry. but I already block anything that has a G domain in it. this would require me to unblock them and that is just 100% unacceptable to me.

    we need a truly good company to help make this happen. google is not the way forward. google is PART OF THE PROBLEM!