Wrong. FTP has a binary mode. This is probably the reason his files are missing several k at the destination. Sending a binary file in ascii mode is the ONLY TIME I've ever had a file not transfer entirely/correctly using FTP. Unless of course there is a network error/timeout, etc, but the FTP client always errored out in those cases.
Using SFTP over an already secure network will only slow things down greatly.
It's probably more like they aren't rolling back some transaction on a network error or something. Network timeouts, etc, are probably doubling up the votes from that machine. It's probably an unusual error so it doesn't get caught in testing. Like busy networks on election night? It's not that hard to imagine.
The Whitehouse can't even find their own frickin emails. They want every Dick and Jane to keep 2 year logs? Bush didn't go to jail, but Jane probably will.
1. Setup some fake files with dummy recording of noise using filenames that would trigger their stupid bots.
2. Wait until your disconnected from your ISP.
3. Take them to court.
4. Profit.
When hacking my Iopeners, I learned you can pull the bios chip from a running computer, put in the bad one, then just re-flash it.
Just have to be careful putting it in not to short the pins. Worked great.
If a wireless mouse can bring down an airplane, I seriously want one of them. I can barely get my mouse more than 2 feet from the receiver before it loses the signal.
This is probably because most O/S's only erase the FAT entries but actually left the file intact on the disk. Browsing the low level sectors still showed the data. This is just from a simple delete, not a wipe process.
I was thinking yesterday after the discussion about whether it is legal to purchase music from Russian allofmp3.com. It was stated that if you actually purchased the music outside of the US then brought it back without, it would be legal.
What if I went up to Canada, purchased some blank-media including the music tax and brought them back with me to the US. Legally, I've already paid for any music downloads I do to put on those CD's, and those rights were obtained outside of the US. Right?
They spoofed the return IP address in the packet they sent to the tracker. Of course, the reply was returned on deaf ears, but the the MAFIA had already logged the source IP as an offender.
The worst part of it though is how they throw in the whole thing of "we weren't actually downloading or sharing anything". No, they were just connecting to the tracker. And of course, everyone knows "pirates" commonly connect to torrent trackers to do nothing. Actually, that is the worst part.. they are sending out take-down notices/suing people that didn't download anything..
Remember, innocent until proven guilty. They aren't even trying to actually determine this.
When I was in college, every student paid a $10/semester fee in return for access to all city buses.
Just do the same thing for the music. $10/semester in exchange for free/unlimited internet access to music. At my school alone, that would be over $600,000 per semester. Canada has the blank-media tax, seems to work there doesn't it?
"SRTM acquired enough data during its ten days of operation to obtain the most complete near-global high-resolution database of the Earth's topography."
The data is very accurate and they released a version of the data to the public. Apparently, there is a much more accurate classified version of the data. I'm sure they could find all sorts of things with this database.
Note, they also used the ground-zero/oceans to calibrate the device on every orbit of the earth which means it doesn't penetrate into the water.
Wrong. FTP has a binary mode. This is probably the reason his files are missing several k at the destination. Sending a binary file in ascii mode is the ONLY TIME I've ever had a file not transfer entirely/correctly using FTP. Unless of course there is a network error/timeout, etc, but the FTP client always errored out in those cases. Using SFTP over an already secure network will only slow things down greatly.
It's probably more like they aren't rolling back some transaction on a network error or something. Network timeouts, etc, are probably doubling up the votes from that machine. It's probably an unusual error so it doesn't get caught in testing. Like busy networks on election night? It's not that hard to imagine.
The Whitehouse can't even find their own frickin emails. They want every Dick and Jane to keep 2 year logs? Bush didn't go to jail, but Jane probably will.
1. Setup some fake files with dummy recording of noise using filenames that would trigger their stupid bots.
2. Wait until your disconnected from your ISP.
3. Take them to court.
4. Profit.
You mean like the version developed by the NSA? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selinux
When hacking my Iopeners, I learned you can pull the bios chip from a running computer, put in the bad one, then just re-flash it.
Just have to be careful putting it in not to short the pins. Worked great.
-Mike
Yeah... they both just want your money. One just costs more.
If a wireless mouse can bring down an airplane, I seriously want one of them. I can barely get my mouse more than 2 feet from the receiver before it loses the signal.
This is probably because most O/S's only erase the FAT entries but actually left the file intact on the disk. Browsing the low level sectors still showed the data. This is just from a simple delete, not a wipe process.
When you say gun, you should say hand-gun. Anybody, even without a license, can carry a rifle without a permit. Even into a bank!
Strong encryption with internet storage is the only way to go now I'm afraid.
It also stored information, in some sort of analog form I believe. Of course, gitmo+indefinitely = nothing new.
I was thinking yesterday after the discussion about whether it is legal to purchase music from Russian allofmp3.com. It was stated that if you actually purchased the music outside of the US then brought it back without, it would be legal.
What if I went up to Canada, purchased some blank-media including the music tax and brought them back with me to the US. Legally, I've already paid for any music downloads I do to put on those CD's, and those rights were obtained outside of the US. Right?
They spoofed the return IP address in the packet they sent to the tracker. Of course, the reply was returned on deaf ears, but the the MAFIA had already logged the source IP as an offender.
Remember, innocent until proven guilty. They aren't even trying to actually determine this.
Just for reference:
http://www.distributed.net/history.php
January 28, 1997
RC5-32/12/7 (56-bit) Secret Key Challenge begins
Patent filed: January 7, 1999
Prior art way before this... and many, many others I'm sure.
VMPlayer doesn't support shared folders, which is what most people are probably using. VMWorkstation does, but I don't know how popular it is.
Doesn't every passenger pay like $9 per segment now? $2/seat seems like a very good deal.
We are already paying way too much.
When I was in college, every student paid a $10/semester fee in return for access to all city buses.
Just do the same thing for the music. $10/semester in exchange for free/unlimited internet access to music.
At my school alone, that would be over $600,000 per semester. Canada has the blank-media tax, seems to work there doesn't it?
Well, maybe they should use the same technology my cable company does to keep bandwidth usage down.
Any user that tries to send more than 1 SMS message per minute gets an RST packet back instead of transmitting the message!
They probably read this article http://mobile.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/01/25/0514215 about cell phones with GPS to track radioactive terrorists. Let's make everybody where blindfolds while were at it.
They used radar to map almost the entire earth. Mission Site http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/mission.htm
"SRTM acquired enough data during its ten days of operation to obtain the most complete near-global high-resolution database of the Earth's topography."
The data is very accurate and they released a version of the data to the public. Apparently, there is a much more accurate classified version of the data. I'm sure they could find all sorts of things with this database.
Note, they also used the ground-zero/oceans to calibrate the device on every orbit of the earth which means it doesn't penetrate into the water.
Yeah, thats why the basement of my old house in Chicago was crumbling in all around me. Those soil movements may be the end to civilization.
I used this exact same method to decode the old pagers by using a scanner plugged into my soundcard. Worked pretty good.