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User: RedGuard

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Comments · 165

  1. Re:"Theft of service" on Spam Meeting Wrap-up · · Score: 1

    In the case of sharing MP3s the person having
    something forced on them is the owner of the
    copyright who loses the right to dispose of
    their (intellectual) property. It's striking that
    so many posters on slashdot consider an email
    address property that spammers are tresspassing on
    but refuse to do the same for pieces of music.

  2. Re:Why? on The End of the Free PCI Device List (Update) · · Score: 1

    The PCI SIG need to own the PCI trademark so
    they can license it only to companies which
    actually conform to the standard - I don't
    understand why so many people find this
    objectionable.

  3. Re:EROS: The Extremely Reliable Operating System on Justifying the Common Criteria Security Evaluation · · Score: 1

    If you run any old crap off the internet then
    you ought to be more worried about it deleting
    your personal files than system files which can
    be restored by reinstalling in 30 minutes.

    Moreover I was wrong to suggest in my earlier
    post that the default ACL would allow full access to HKLM: a clean installation of Windows 2000
    gives the group Users only read access to
    so you must have been either a Power User or an Administrator.

    It is true that there is legacy software that
    requires to run in a more privileged context
    than is necessary - but by the same token there
    are Unix programs that require suid root when
    they don't need it. This doesn't have any
    bearing on the underlying security of the system
    only that users have the choice in both cases to
    forego some security to run more software.

  4. Re:EROS: The Extremely Reliable Operating System on Justifying the Common Criteria Security Evaluation · · Score: 1

    If you want you can set a more restrictive
    ACL on that registry tree. However I doubt most
    users need to be prevented from intentionally
    destroyed their systems.

  5. Re:EROS: The Extremely Reliable Operating System on Justifying the Common Criteria Security Evaluation · · Score: 1

    Its a bug in the application which runs a
    privileged process on an unprivileged user's
    desktop - a properly written application would
    be unprivileged and use an IPC mechanism to
    communicate with the service it controls.

  6. Re:removable RAM? on Graphics Memory Sizes Compared: How Much Is Enough? · · Score: 1

    That's exactly how most motherboard graphics
    chipsets (like the Intel 840) work - it's also
    very slow because 3d graphics is very memory
    bandwidth intensive.

  7. Re:Libertarian on Grubb for Congress. By Weblog. · · Score: 1

    German civilian casualities were more like
    hundreds of thousands or millions and as for the
    idea that the second world war was sought to
    stop the holocaust, this is an invention of the
    last couple of decades; during WW2 the allies
    didn't mention it very much for fear of
    alienating their domestic populations and at the
    Nuremburg trials the main charge against the
    defendants was crimes against peace, the death
    camps were secondary. Also a large number of
    German civilian casualities occurred during
    bombing raids, the allies had a specific policy
    of bombing workers' housing to affect the morale
    of the population, and after the war due to
    cold, disease and malnutrition which the
    occupying power did very little to alleviate.
    How were the deaths of these people supposed
    to be stopping the holocaust?

  8. Re:Oh, the Irony.... on Russia Poised to Restrict Net Activities · · Score: 1

    Practically the first act of the Yelstin
    government was to ban the CPSU (and a smaller
    split.) It was only legalised as the KPRF
    several years later. So I think they already
    know.

  9. Re:Classic Microsoft Quotes in the Article on Software Product Liability? · · Score: 1

    How can you ever guarantee that a program
    is reliable? Microsoft is just telling the user
    that the driver has been subject to some quite
    intensive testing by an independent party so
    there is more evidence for its reliability than
    just its developers say-so.

  10. Re:trolling on South Africa Wants Control of .za · · Score: 1

    > We fight the communists
    >
    And the communists kicked your ass.
    Silly boneheads.

  11. Re:Newer Windows *does* have a newer security poli on Linux and the Smile.D Virus keeps us Smiling · · Score: 2, Informative

    NT has privileges (so users don't need to be
    root to do certain operations), access control
    lists for all objects, more than 32 groups for a
    user, impersonation (so a server can take on the
    identity of a connecting user and do operations
    on their behalf).

  12. Re:Newer Windows *does* have a newer security poli on Linux and the Smile.D Virus keeps us Smiling · · Score: 1

    The operating system provides the mechanisms
    for security (and Windows NT/2K/XP does) but
    this doesn't help if applications don't make
    use of the mechanisms, by insisting on running
    in a privileged mode for example. Just the same
    problem can exist on UNIX systems.

  13. Re:Unfortunately... on Red Hat Files for Software Patents · · Score: 1

    Microsoft wrote the first version of OS/2 and
    Windows NT was to have been the second version.

  14. Re:More details at El Reg (WHICH SAYS ITS A HOAX) on Matrox's New Three-Head Video Card · · Score: 1

    DX9 multichannel surfaces can have a different
    format for channel including 32-bit floats.
    So a surface using 128bits is possible.

  15. Getting it backwards on Simulating Societies · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From what the article describes, the people doing these experiments have got their research backwatds. Specficially finding that a particular set of assumptions to a simulation generates a result 'like' human society is meaningless unless you also show that the assumptions are legitimate. The racism example was particularly egregious; nowhere is it explained why ignoring the effect of income distribution, access to jobs, the actions of the government, etc on where people lived was valid. It gives the strong impression that showing that racial division arises from inscrutable preferences is attractive for political reasons more than anything.

  16. Re:We shouldn't use violence...... on USAF Readies Laser of Death · · Score: 1

    Point out that defending a peaceful demonstration
    against rightist thugs has nothing in common
    with defending US imperialism, responsible for
    more death and destruction than al-Queda could
    ever dream of.

  17. Re:Who thought this? on Functional Languages Under .NET/CLR · · Score: 1

    MS have kidnapped Britain's entire population
    of functional language designers.

  18. Re:How about "Windows for Unix Admins" on What Kind of Books do You Want? · · Score: 1

    I think you should start with something more
    basic; the system tray is nothing like /etc/init.d
    the similar function is performed by the services
    applet available from the control panel; you
    can set the start order, user to run as, etc
    of services (aka daemons).

  19. Re:Lousy research on WinInformant Says Windows More Secure Than Linux · · Score: 1

    I thought releasing beta ("untested in the field")
    software was a Microsoft practice. Why is an
    excuse for Linux vendors?

  20. Re:OT - Re:Why not exchange it at the store? on XBox Defects Draw Ire · · Score: 1

    Indeed the number of casualities has nothing do
    with who is right and wrong but the popular
    press in both the US and Europe seems to pay a lot
    more attention to Israeli deaths and Palestinians
    killed are either described as 'militants' or
    as having been killed accidently by the IDF. It
    would be as though reporting on WW2 detailed
    every death of a US solider but never mentioned
    those killed at Hiroshima.

  21. Re:But, the bug is worse with a MSFT OS! on Oracle 9i Isn't Quite Unbreakable · · Score: 1

    Under Windows NT/2000/XP you can very easily
    configure what user a service runs as. Moreover
    unlike Unix you don't need to have webservers
    running as root and then rely on them giving up
    their privileges correctly.

  22. Re:Impressive on Windows XP Embedded · · Score: 1

    That's the requirements for the system you are doing development on.

  23. Re:On to the Americas.... on Sell Out: Blocking an Open Net · · Score: 1

    > One problem is that Guatemala and Chile have
    > chosen less than ideal governments
    >
    So the US decided to choose for them as is well
    documented, and neither are these the only
    examples. Of course for the US this was inbetween
    being a champion of anti-imperialism and
    democracy.
    > The Palestinians are part of the problem
    >
    So you admit Israeli discrimination but
    just like every kind of racism you
    justify it by some threatening myth
    about the target group.

  24. Re:Democracies in the Middle East on Sell Out: Blocking an Open Net · · Score: 1

    > If one act of imperialism prevents 4...
    >
    So the people of South America (for
    example) have your blessing to despose
    the US government; if one act of
    imperialism prevents another Chile,
    Guatamealo, Nicaragua, Hati, etc.

    Israel is an explicitly religious state with
    laws to match. Furthermore freedom is
    indivisible; the Israeli government may not kill
    apostates but it does kill, tortue and deny
    democratic rights to people for being born to
    the wrong parents.

  25. Re:Democracies in the Middle East on Sell Out: Blocking an Open Net · · Score: 1

    > The US's now dusty "imperialism" in
    > that area is now several decades old
    >
    It may be dusty to you but it's very
    real for people living in the region.

    > Remember also, that Iran under the
    > Shah was not imperialist.
    >
    So by deposing an elected government
    the US was preventing imperialism!

    > Was the U.S. not a democracy during
    > the years it occupied Japan?
    >
    That's quite right; a country which
    denies democratic rights to people
    living under its control is not
    a democracy. Equally the US was
    not a democracy when it denied
    blacks the vote.

    > Israel is anxious to get out of those
    > territories,
    >
    That must be why it is building
    settlements there.

    > For example, you are allowed
    > to practice your religion
    > there. Israel's neighbors,
    > in contrast, tend to have
    > laws to punish people for
    > being of the wrong religion.
    >
    What a singular sense of
    humour you have; not only
    does Israel punish
    people for being the
    wrong religion, it also
    punishes them for having
    the wrong parents or
    living in the wrong
    place.