Right click on element in the bottom pane and "Delete Node"
Even big companies like Facebooks "You must login" dialog are easily defeated in this manner. Used to be a plugin "Nuke Anything" which made this a one-click task, but it's been gone for a while, or at least invisible to me...
Since it's SO SIMPLE to make this not work ( i.e. make the overlays effective ) I like to think that it is so easy thanks to guerilla Free As In Speech programmers at these big corporations who purposefully make easy-to-circumvent blocking. It could be incompetence, but you'd think at least ONE page would do it right.
Oh wait, I forgot about Xfinity. The confusion between Comcast and Xfinity being available in the same area is probably the impetus behind the FCC considering that competition.
Also, if a newspaper reporter gets classified documents and writes a story about it, FOR MOST CASES, no crime on their part, and they knew it was classified. The person handing it over, whether they "knew it was classified" or not is the liable party. Otherwise the law would be completely unenforceable. Imagine if you could get out of murder by saying "I didn't know murder was illegal."
Am I understanding correctly? Of course I didn't read TFA, but from the summary I'm guessing that dude had Kapersky antivirus, and when he loaded the files it sent them home for scanning, and since they're a Russian company the Russian government has access to the files. This doesn't really make sense to me. It would make sense that it could send the checksums back home to compare, except even that doesn't make a lot of sense, since the "virus database" (aka a list of checksums of flagged blocks) should be local. Maybe he was using some sort of browser plugin version?
The only other way this could make sense is if the Russian government forced K to insert a backdoor into its software, which they used to gain access. So far I've only heard of the USA doing this, so it would be a big deal if this were the case, but since the summary doesn't have some clickbait about massive hole in K products discovered, I also don't think this is the case.
Most likely this is just more stupid "Russia bad, because... Russia!" garbage being spewed by folks who really don't understand or want to understand how things work. Can someone clarify if this isn't the case and I missed something?
Excuse me while I switch to Linux and broadcast my IP address, version of my distribution, repositories from which I'm using software, and the occasional download of specific software which I've actually installed to all of the us.distro.org mirrors partnered with my distribution maintainer.
Why not switch to something like www.archlinux.org if you're worried that a server somewhere has logs of you downloading software... it's not like windows where you have a rootkit and a million background "services" running for everything you install filled with bugs and vulnerabilities. If you don't turn it on, it doesn't run. And nobody's gonna be able to say "ohhh, ip X downloaded openssh, let's hax them." Because... well I'll leave that an exercise for you to figure out why that's a big barrel of nothing.
So, what, because gnome 3 (which is like... what... 5-10 years old by now?) didn't mimic the windows start-buttonsy desktop and instead focused on the user, "focus on one app at a time", "Be able to quickly see and switch to all apps" I think both of those goals were achieved flawlessly with gnome3. And hell, my desktop use is a web browser or a terminal running screen..
More likely you're just repeating some garbage you heard or read somewhere once.. At least I hope so, otherwise you can't see interfaces beyond 1995.
it's not that difficult to pay off someone on the gmail support staff to dump your account contents.
You don't even need to do that! You just need to have an annoying clippie-knockoff that is an ugly purple ape thing on your system, which tells jokes and spins balls around, or throws bananas across your screen. Then no matter the encryption, if it's decrypted for your eyes or viewable in any way, that "tophat search" toolbar or whatever will have no problem getting it.
My news source says that this guy was actually legitimately buying the towers, but because of some backroom HILBAMA scheme after he spent the money it got reversed, he was blamed for hacking.
As far as motivation, according to several anonymous sources that couldn't be contacted for further details, word on the street was this guy had a lot of secret details THE GOVERNMENT DOESN'T WANT YOU TO KNOW about the REAL story of..... BatBoy!
"fixes need to be implemented into BIOS/UEFI updates as well and it is not clear at this time if all major vendors have included these changes in their latest revisions."
Methinks it's fixed in microcode like everything else, and the article even mentions that it is. Probably written by somebody who thinks everything non-windows means BIOS.
Wow! I kept reading over and over trying to find how it was escalating ring level or information leak through cache etc. but couldn't find it! I reaaaaallly wasn't expecting any type of "flaw" on slashdot to not be about some dumb security mistake. Way to surprise me again, SLUSHBOT
Wait.... what? First of all.... you can get TWICE that by using an "unsigned" 32-bit.... since there should never be a negative game ID.
And also what 32-bit machine doesn't have register-combining for 64-bit variables? Just because it isn't representable in a signed 32-bit integer does NOT mean it's 32-bit incompatible...
Russia can create fake hysteria in America, made up disasters, and form political causes out of the ether which sway American policy in the direction they like.
So..... you're saying that you're Russian?
Also, why does it always have to be Russians? Anyone can do that. And they do. Hell, some comedy sites like nationalreport.net are taken serious by some folks.
What it seems you're arguing for is some sort of system where we don't have to worry about lowly people having influence on their leaders, and rather one where the leader's just choose the leaders, since they are above influence. Sounds like a country I've heard of...
It's not a highlighting issue. In my experience of dealing with other people's horribly written code, it is most common through a file being "included" which closes it, but the code continues thinking it's still open. If you are dealing with either file by itself, the highlighting is perfect. It's when they combine, often associated with error cases (like, you assume "!value" means you are including it as a template, and not that the value is null, etc).
Sorry if that's not clear, but I've had that happen on.... well..... I think maybe every single PHP codebase I've had to inherit over the years.
It's probably mostly meaningless. I mean, they scanned for features of people who are suicidal. They were in the hospital because they inflicted self harm, and were on medications specifically prescribed to make people not do that. So as far as I can tell, this doesn't predict anything, it juts measures that "80-90% of the time doctors do the same thing for folks who would hurt themselves".
It's not like they randomly picked a bunch of people off the street and determined from THAT. Like basically every single other artificial intelligence or machine learning story, it's a bunch of dumb hype, eventually to get folks investing in stupid startups.
You don't write device drivers in Python, I'm sure
Holy crap I wish that were true. You'd be surprised some of the awful interfaces for hardware devices I've had to deal with, thanks to the abomination that is FUSE (which allows.... that's right.... you can write device drivers in USERSPACE, in ANY LANGUAGE:(
getting Archlinux isn't copyright infringement...
> as the lead developer of a single-page-app that most certainly requires javascript
Stop that.
But what about aJax?
Funny how nothing changed in the past 20 years... I would've thought by now the more reputable cracker crews would digitally sign their stuff.
That would defeat plausible deniability.
modal popups
I've yet to find one that I couldn't
Even big companies like Facebooks "You must login" dialog are easily defeated in this manner.
Used to be a plugin "Nuke Anything" which made this a one-click task, but it's been gone for a while, or at least invisible to me...
Since it's SO SIMPLE to make this not work ( i.e. make the overlays effective ) I like to think that it is so easy thanks to guerilla Free As In Speech programmers at these big corporations who purposefully make easy-to-circumvent blocking. It could be incompetence, but you'd think at least ONE page would do it right.
This is all just for the build-up of a yet-unannounced Rocky remake.
I believe that currently every ISP has to build their own stadium, no sharing allowed.
But they broke up Bell which owned all the lines into several smaller regional monopolies. That's progress, right?
Oh wait, I forgot about Xfinity. The confusion between Comcast and Xfinity being available in the same area is probably the impetus behind the FCC considering that competition.
Only Comcast OR Verizon here in the FCC's back yard..
Hilarious if this leads to big AI.
Maybe not big AI, but it can identify Big AL
That said, unless you can prove she KNEW it was classified material, from the PUBLIC SOURCES, no case, no crime
That's not true at all. In fact, some ideas are even born classified. ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... ).
Also, if a newspaper reporter gets classified documents and writes a story about it, FOR MOST CASES, no crime on their part, and they knew it was classified. The person handing it over, whether they "knew it was classified" or not is the liable party. Otherwise the law would be completely unenforceable. Imagine if you could get out of murder by saying "I didn't know murder was illegal."
Apparently if you don't "intend" to mishandle classified
Even simpler, if you "forget" what classified means, it's okay. A La Hilary.
Am I understanding correctly? Of course I didn't read TFA, but from the summary I'm guessing that dude had Kapersky antivirus, and when he loaded the files it sent them home for scanning, and since they're a Russian company the Russian government has access to the files. This doesn't really make sense to me. It would make sense that it could send the checksums back home to compare, except even that doesn't make a lot of sense, since the "virus database" (aka a list of checksums of flagged blocks) should be local. Maybe he was using some sort of browser plugin version?
The only other way this could make sense is if the Russian government forced K to insert a backdoor into its software, which they used to gain access. So far I've only heard of the USA doing this, so it would be a big deal if this were the case, but since the summary doesn't have some clickbait about massive hole in K products discovered, I also don't think this is the case.
Most likely this is just more stupid "Russia bad, because... Russia!" garbage being spewed by folks who really don't understand or want to understand how things work. Can someone clarify if this isn't the case and I missed something?
Excuse me while I switch to Linux and broadcast my IP address, version of my distribution, repositories from which I'm using software, and the occasional download of specific software which I've actually installed to all of the us.distro.org mirrors partnered with my distribution maintainer.
Why not switch to something like www.archlinux.org if you're worried that a server somewhere has logs of you downloading software... it's not like windows where you have a rootkit and a million background "services" running for everything you install filled with bugs and vulnerabilities. If you don't turn it on, it doesn't run. And nobody's gonna be able to say "ohhh, ip X downloaded openssh, let's hax them." Because... well I'll leave that an exercise for you to figure out why that's a big barrel of nothing.
So, what, because gnome 3 (which is like... what... 5-10 years old by now?) didn't mimic the windows start-buttonsy desktop and instead focused on the user, "focus on one app at a time", "Be able to quickly see and switch to all apps" I think both of those goals were achieved flawlessly with gnome3. And hell, my desktop use is a web browser or a terminal running screen..
More likely you're just repeating some garbage you heard or read somewhere once.. At least I hope so, otherwise you can't see interfaces beyond 1995.
it's not that difficult to pay off someone on the gmail support staff to dump your account contents.
You don't even need to do that! You just need to have an annoying clippie-knockoff that is an ugly purple ape thing on your system, which tells jokes and spins balls around, or throws bananas across your screen. Then no matter the encryption, if it's decrypted for your eyes or viewable in any way, that "tophat search" toolbar or whatever will have no problem getting it.
And if you think a million people wouldn't willingly install such a thing.... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
My news source says that this guy was actually legitimately buying the towers, but because of some backroom HILBAMA scheme after he spent the money it got reversed, he was blamed for hacking.
As far as motivation, according to several anonymous sources that couldn't be contacted for further details, word on the street was this guy had a lot of secret details THE GOVERNMENT DOESN'T WANT YOU TO KNOW about the REAL story of..... BatBoy!
"fixes need to be implemented into BIOS/UEFI updates as well and it is not clear at this time if all major vendors have included these changes in their latest revisions."
Methinks it's fixed in microcode like everything else, and the article even mentions that it is. Probably written by somebody who thinks everything non-windows means BIOS.
What? This post makes no sense at all.
Wow! I kept reading over and over trying to find how it was escalating ring level or information leak through cache etc. but couldn't find it! I reaaaaallly wasn't expecting any type of "flaw" on slashdot to not be about some dumb security mistake. Way to surprise me again, SLUSHBOT
Wait.... what? First of all.... you can get TWICE that by using an "unsigned" 32-bit.... since there should never be a negative game ID.
And also what 32-bit machine doesn't have register-combining for 64-bit variables? Just because it isn't representable in a signed 32-bit integer does NOT mean it's 32-bit incompatible...
This explanation makes absolutely no sense to me.
Russia can create fake hysteria in America, made up disasters, and form political causes out of the ether which sway American policy in the direction they like.
So..... you're saying that you're Russian?
Also, why does it always have to be Russians? Anyone can do that. And they do. Hell, some comedy sites like nationalreport.net are taken serious by some folks.
What it seems you're arguing for is some sort of system where we don't have to worry about lowly people having influence on their leaders, and rather one where the leader's just choose the leaders, since they are above influence. Sounds like a country I've heard of...
It's not a highlighting issue. In my experience of dealing with other people's horribly written code, it is most common through a file being "included" which closes it, but the code continues thinking it's still open. If you are dealing with either file by itself, the highlighting is perfect. It's when they combine, often associated with error cases (like, you assume "!value" means you are including it as a template, and not that the value is null, etc).
Sorry if that's not clear, but I've had that happen on.... well..... I think maybe every single PHP codebase I've had to inherit over the years.
It's probably mostly meaningless. I mean, they scanned for features of people who are suicidal. They were in the hospital because they inflicted self harm, and were on medications specifically prescribed to make people not do that. So as far as I can tell, this doesn't predict anything, it juts measures that "80-90% of the time doctors do the same thing for folks who would hurt themselves".
It's not like they randomly picked a bunch of people off the street and determined from THAT. Like basically every single other artificial intelligence or machine learning story, it's a bunch of dumb hype, eventually to get folks investing in stupid startups.
You don't write device drivers in Python, I'm sure
Holy crap I wish that were true. You'd be surprised some of the awful interfaces for hardware devices I've had to deal with, thanks to the abomination that is FUSE (which allows.... that's right.... you can write device drivers in USERSPACE, in ANY LANGUAGE :(
If only someone could invent a new language.A derivative of Python, but using braces, that compiles to regular Python.
You already have it! Try this code out:
from __future__ import braces
If you're not aware, "__future__" contains future features and importing them changes how the file is processed.