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User: ShaunC

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Comments · 1,337

  1. Re:Wow, that's illegal? on FCC Issues Forfeiture Notices to Two Business for Jamming Cellular Frequencies · · Score: 1

    The building was constructed with certain building materials and laid out so that it blocked all wireless radio frequencies in and out of the building - especially cellular traffic. If that is not illegal, I don't see how cellular jamming wouold be illegal.

    Think of it like this. Suppose you're worried about intruders on your property. It's perfectly legal to put up a 10 foot tall fence topped with concertina wire, build your walls out of 5 foot thick concrete, and place some angry rottweilers around the perimeter. But it's not legal to erect a couple of rotating Gatling guns firing rounds out from the property to keep people away.

  2. Re:Interesting on Why AppGratis Was Pulled From the App Store · · Score: 1

    Nope, they haven't removed the app from users who already had it installed. It still works just fine for existing users, but nobody new can download it. I'm really sort of torn on this - Apple has the right to enforce its guidelines, and it appears that AppGratis technically violated the letter of the law. But did they violate the spirit? I guess Groupon and a number of others should be pulled, too, because they send out the push-messages each day as well...

  3. Re:Modular systems on Navy ships on Navy To Deploy Lasers On Ship In 2014 · · Score: 1

    Only one technology can deliver that: Nuclear power.

    Which is why I was surprised to see that they're going to deploy this laser on the Ponce, an Austin-class ship with 4 diesel turbines. I figured they'd have chosen a nuclear vessel.

  4. Re:Obviously the cached content was not current on Google Cache Makes Murdoch's K-12 Site Look Obscene · · Score: 2

    <boondock-saints>FUCK! ASS!</boondock-saints>

  5. Here is FlightAware's live data map on Boeing's 787 Dreamliner Has Taken Its Battery Certification Flight · · Score: 1

    BOE272, since submitter apparently forgot that link.

  6. Re:Creative directo? on Microsoft Apologizes For Cavalier 'Always-Online' DRM Tweets · · Score: 2

    Maybe we should ask Dice.com, surely they know how many Creative Directos are out there.

  7. Re:What a waste on Boston Cops Go Undercover Online To Crack Down on Concerts · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's a lot easier to get paid to sit at a desk and troll Facebook all day.

  8. Re:Affect on spam? on Did the Spamhaus DDoS Really Slow Down Global Internet Access? · · Score: 1

    Doesn't seem to be much of a difference according to Spamcop stats. For all the hullabaloo, whatever spammer lives at Cyberbunker doesn't seem to be a very big player.

  9. Re:Determining vulnerability? on Misconfigured Open DNS Resolvers Key To Massive DDoS Attacks · · Score: 1

    I found 8.8.8.8, 4.2.2.4 etc. on there, which I'm hoping are set up responsibly. But I don't know of a "known bad" resolver to scan and see if the results come out differently.

  10. Determining vulnerability? on Misconfigured Open DNS Resolvers Key To Massive DDoS Attacks · · Score: 1

    I see that the Open Resolver Project has a tool to scan for offending servers in your IP space, but it doesn't explain what the results indicate. I'm guessing that an RCODE value of 0 means you're not part of the problem?

  11. Re:Twitter-shaming. on SendGrid Fires Employee After Firestorm Over Inappropriate Jokes · · Score: 1

    The girl involved in the Steubenville rape case I mentioned in my previous post was threatened with death and physical harm on social media for the 'harm' she was doing to the local football team by pursuing charges.

    And many of these threats were made by girls, two of whom were subsequently charged for it.

  12. Re:You can't un-post an image on SendGrid Fires Employee After Firestorm Over Inappropriate Jokes · · Score: 1

    All of this pubic on the internet.

    I hope you have some good savings banked up, because that's totally sexist and out of line!

  13. Re:Did it make a sound? on Meteor Streaks Over American East Coast · · Score: 1

    It was more like a KAPOOYA.

  14. Re:correction on Botnet Uses Default Passwords To Conduct "Internet Census 2012" · · Score: 1

    I doubt it. Most of these are automated scanning from compromised machines in general, not this guy's one project, and from what I gather, the "census" was more polite about the number of login attempts. I've been getting random scans for years and I don't foresee them stopping anytime soon.

  15. Re:Always the optimist on EFF Jumps In To Defend Bloggers Being Sued By Prenda · · Score: 1

    Their entire "business model" revolves around suing John Does. They wouldn't hesitate to sue an AC.

  16. Frampton came alive on The Manti Te'o of Physics · · Score: 3, Funny

    Do you, you... Feel like I do?

  17. Re:I'm impressed on Microsoft: the 'Scroogled' Show Must Go On · · Score: 1

    It's a bug, whether that's admitted to or not. Articles from the mysterious future are supposed to be visible to paid subscribers only. Turns out, though, this varnish shit is kinda tough.

  18. Re: First strike on Six-Strikes System Starts In U.S. · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've already seen similar shit in my area where an ISP claims you have a "virus" and pulls your plug if you use more data than your average grandma.

    This is actually a soft warning tactic I've encountered in many corporate and education scenarios. They'll identify folks using a lot of transit, and send them a notice along the lines of "hey, we noticed you're using a lot of bandwidth... Maybe you've got a virus or something?" These notices work particularly well in cases where someone's been found to be downloading gigs of porn on the office computer, etc. The user realizes he's being watched, says "yeah! that must be it! I gotta virus!" and suddenly the behavior stops.

    I'm not defending the ISP you mention, just saying this tactic is pretty common. It's their way of asking you to knock it off, without accusing you of anything.

  19. Re:More Likely on Ask Slashdot: Identity Theft Attempt In Progress; How To Respond? · · Score: 1

    That's what it sounds like to me, too. An identity thief wouldn't be having all of these email notifications etc. being sent to the victim's address, he'd have created an account on Yahoo or something to receive those messages without the victim knowing. The porn site registrations are a pretty good sign that this is "revenge spam." Someone just wants to annoy the heck out of submitter.

    As an aside, anytime Apple updates their Terms of Service on an iOS device, there's always a button for "Send these terms via email." That form performs no check on a) whether the address entered belongs to an Apple ID, or b) whether you've already emailed the terms. So, you can easily have Apple spam someone's mailbox with as many copies of their TOS as you're willing to waste time on. Last time I did this, each click of the send button actually generated two emails... One about the TOS and one about the game store, or something.

  20. Re:Yahoo mail too? on Zendesk Compromised; Twitter, Tumblr and Pinterest Users Affected · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think it's mostly phishing attacks. It's really unbelievable the number of people who fall for that shit.

    Our organization has about 3,500 email users and every once in awhile a phish campaign will make it through our filters to a large portion of the user base. Without fail, a dozen or more users will fall for it and have their accounts used to pump out spam. What's maddening is that the same individuals continue to get phished over and over, even after repeatedly being educated not to ever give out their passwords. They see some tech-jargon looking email and their brain just shuts down. I'm at an enterprise full of generally intelligent folks - I can only imagine what's going on in the brain of your average Yahoo user.

    One of the funnier and somewhat more subtle compromises we experienced was a spammer who targeted our corporate webmail interface. He phished several accounts but didn't directly send spam like most of them do. Instead, he logged in via webmail and placed various porn and boner-pill advertisements in those accounts' signatures. As a result, some of our employees were unwittingly sending out porn ads appended to their legitimate business emails for awhile...

  21. Re:Is the elephant in the china shop... on CT State Senator Wants To Ban Kids From Using Arcade Guns · · Score: 1

    This guy, Toni Harp, is also a woman...

  22. Re:No sympathy.... sorry. on No Wi-Fi Around Huge Radio Telescope · · Score: 1

    Hi Gene, I just want to say thank you for your wisdom in this thread. 78 and Slashdotting, I love it. We need more like you!

  23. Re:Referer Header! on Google Redesigns Image Search, Raises Copyright and Hosting Concerns · · Score: 2

    Heh. Some years ago, BlackPlanet.com (basically "MySpace for African-Americans" at the time) actually hotlinked an image on a site of mine into their templating system. It wasn't just random users, this pic was built straight into their publishing platform, meaning tens of thousands of users were selecting this particular image on my server to be part of the theme of their BlackPlanet page.

    Didn't take them too long after my RewriteRule to rehost it on their own server.

  24. "Cyber 9/11" on Officials Warn: Cyber War On the US Has Begun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really? So we're going to see buildings destroyed, thousands murdered? The hyperbole is way out of hand on this one.

  25. Re:Was AT&T prosecuted? on Andrew Auernheimer Case Uncomfortably Similar To Aaron Swartz Case · · Score: 1

    And why is there no link of said reporter defending his source?

    It was Gawker...