I'm a bit jealous, these people were able to spin a brand new role out of virtually nothing, but there's a giant elephant in the room here, what happens when the privacy professional gets breached? I doubt they're any special, or have a crystal ball for predicting zero days, so say they get breached, your data is compromised... you're getting sued by your customers... you go to sue the privacy firm, who closes doors and goes chapter 7. I would rather throw my data in the cloud lol. At least you can then sue amazon or something.
In scope, google is a private 3rd party service provider for email and a bunch of other stuff. What they require is not legally enforceable or really relevant. Short of having to submit physical documentation to create an account, how do they know the real name I gave is really me? Or a fake alias?
It's not great, but it works cross-platform, is brain dead easy to set up, and for troubleshooting purposes, has sufficient performance. RDP works faster than anything we've mentioned, but that requires a walk through of how to log out of a session (or you can just kick em), and you have to replicate the problem yourself at that point.
Not quite, just be nice, and politely refuse to answer any questions. Ask if you're under arrest, no? Tell the cop you're leaving and leave. I don't believe there's anything that states you actually have to talk to a cop. However, not talking to a cop in a cop's mind is suspicious, so while you can get in a fight with the pig and still win, nobody wants to go to jail and then have to clear the charges through the system paying a lawyer and then maybe going after the cop legally if there's any $ left. What you can't do is give anything relevant.
I remember back in the.NET 1.1 days, googling most.NET things returned an MSDN link, and sometimes going directly to msdn gave even better results. Fast forward a few years to.NET 4.0 and MSDN is fragmented beyond belief and cross versions solutions don't always work. So you might find the solution in 4.0, try to apply it to 2.0 and find that there's no 2.0 version of the doc and the 4.0 doesn't work.
SO works more on the crowd principal, where more relevant posts are updated the most and happen to be timeframe relevant. Also, you can always ask a question yourself.
MSDN is set in stone, and the social site MS has and other dev networking sites, just don't have as much interesting stuff as SO, don't rank as high in the search, and have much slower response times. SO is good at what it does, MSDN has fragmented, I'd say that is the main reason SO is in the title of the article today.
My post is primarily about.NET, but there's everything on SO, including stuff like REST, php, all versions of SQL, etc...
What you said, except for an SSL tunnel instead of opening ports. Once you're in the network, vnc will work just as well. Surprised nobody else has mentioned VNC, it is THE solution for family remote support lol.
Well... they didn't know what "The Onion" was. And ya they are looking to poke the US in the eye, shame for them the ISPs already deployed their monitoring system.
what indeed? I wonder if N. Korea knows exactly what they're offering here. It sounds like they don't, or that it's a hoax. Either way, TPB has at the very least another host willing to take it.
I don't think they know what they're doing, they've censored most of the content that TPB serves, and now they want TPB to serve it out of their country? Sounds off...
what a load of horseshit, the science isn't all there yet, but realize that our science is far from complete, however if you've ever been around a dog for an extended amount of time, you'd notice there's a bit more going in how dogs and humans relate. This is a matter of common sense over science, and this research is trying to bring the latter back in league.
I believe it's called taking pride in your work. Less and less of that going around, but yes the people at Valve would have to enjoy what they do (making games, coding) to succeed there. And there's tons of programmers who as an equivalent to your example contribute to open source on the side, but I don't know, maybe there's something unnatural about sitting behind a computer 40 hours a week that leads to the overall trend of high job turn over and a dis rest among the workforce?
Obama wants to do the same thing with medical records.
I'm also a bit conflicted on the security aspect of the matter, what would any non-pedo's motive be for stealing / compromising this data? The only thing is it becomes a true permanent record in the sense that it can be easily retrieved 20 years down the line. But, another interesting aspect is, nobody that I know of that employees people actually looks up grades and kinda just take your word for it, could that change?
And yet another interesting aspect is how we separate the privacy of 18. Could this erode that line?
1. Games innovate coding techniques a lot of times, algorithms, methods, best practices, etc... 2. Business apps innovate the methodologies, techniques, and things related to saving the business money by streamlining processes, pretty sure MVC came out of this, but MVC is NOT for games by any means. Agile though...:)
That makes sense, so like a thread = entire server kind of scope from my example. Is it really appropriate to call it a database, or a smart distributed cache? In addition to local data interacting faster with local data, memory is even faster, I'd imagine that would make it a ways more complicated to design/implement though.
why you don't google your false facts before posting is beyond me: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_education , but it's a bit more than 400 by a few thousand years. You might be thinking > the history of the red bricked school building or something.
What the difference between threading an app and sharding it are? I'm kinda leaning towards writing this off as a bunch of theoretical BS, not the kind that makes sense either. Database servers are the highest load servers on most networks, distributing data process to them sounds idiotic at best.
It can, I'm specifically referring to the common business user, of whom I've seen acts of stupidity that never cease to amaze me. To have them write any sort of code is hilarious, they'd have to prove that they can handle admin rights on their local machine first without putting in a ticket weekly. Let me emphasis again, since there seems to be a mental blockade here or something: I'm talking about non-IT personnel as the article suggests. Oh, and I use shells all the time, but for scripting, not coding, google the difference or something.
Interesting, but how does that work? Recruiters work based on commission, so if Habib fluffs his resume and then gets hired, and his team recognizes he can't tell.NET from C++, wouldn't that person get fired and the recruiter subsequently barred for not submitting a qualified candidate? What's crazy is at some bigger shops this recognition can take years, so I guess there's a slim grey margin to walk there, but still lame.
On the surface, the ISPs are saying that this system is to help inform the public of copyright violations, and better help secure their networks or some BS like that. That's ALL that matters, hold em to it, if you get taken to court and evidence is presented to you from this system, the first question I'd ask is how do you know this data resides on my computer? Since a person != an IP address then that suddenly becomes very difficult. They cannot hack you, that's illegal. All they can do is associate an IP address on a tracker.
I think the biggest change is that people in many fields will be using programming as a tool in their non-programming job. This is already the case, but it is largely informal
My point to you is this isn't and will never be true as far as jobs are concerned.
When you say that I think of Joe from sales, and I think about how I'd never let anybody from that department have even a little bit more access than they need to.
Maybe you're thinking scripting or something? Even so, I'd never let anybody run an untested script, or untested code. If it's coming from a non-programmer I may not even justify QC time for it. Now, if as an admin, you write a script that say starts a certain service across a datacenter as part of an update, I wouldn't call that programming, I'd call that scripting to be clear (and you'd still have to test it). I like to think of programs as something produced through a compiler (web dev exception!)
That won't work because there's too many people who actually rely on those subsidies to feed and cloth their children. They're kind of the future of our race and all, I'm sure you spare a dollar or two.
The day I take responsibility for other people's kids in any way shape or form is the day that device to stab people in the face over the internet gets invented.
I'm a bit jealous, these people were able to spin a brand new role out of virtually nothing, but there's a giant elephant in the room here, what happens when the privacy professional gets breached? I doubt they're any special, or have a crystal ball for predicting zero days, so say they get breached, your data is compromised... you're getting sued by your customers... you go to sue the privacy firm, who closes doors and goes chapter 7. I would rather throw my data in the cloud lol. At least you can then sue amazon or something.
In scope, google is a private 3rd party service provider for email and a bunch of other stuff. What they require is not legally enforceable or really relevant. Short of having to submit physical documentation to create an account, how do they know the real name I gave is really me? Or a fake alias?
It's not great, but it works cross-platform, is brain dead easy to set up, and for troubleshooting purposes, has sufficient performance. RDP works faster than anything we've mentioned, but that requires a walk through of how to log out of a session (or you can just kick em), and you have to replicate the problem yourself at that point.
Not quite, just be nice, and politely refuse to answer any questions. Ask if you're under arrest, no? Tell the cop you're leaving and leave. I don't believe there's anything that states you actually have to talk to a cop. However, not talking to a cop in a cop's mind is suspicious, so while you can get in a fight with the pig and still win, nobody wants to go to jail and then have to clear the charges through the system paying a lawyer and then maybe going after the cop legally if there's any $ left. What you can't do is give anything relevant.
I remember back in the .NET 1.1 days, googling most .NET things returned an MSDN link, and sometimes going directly to msdn gave even better results. Fast forward a few years to .NET 4.0 and MSDN is fragmented beyond belief and cross versions solutions don't always work. So you might find the solution in 4.0, try to apply it to 2.0 and find that there's no 2.0 version of the doc and the 4.0 doesn't work.
SO works more on the crowd principal, where more relevant posts are updated the most and happen to be timeframe relevant. Also, you can always ask a question yourself.
MSDN is set in stone, and the social site MS has and other dev networking sites, just don't have as much interesting stuff as SO, don't rank as high in the search, and have much slower response times. SO is good at what it does, MSDN has fragmented, I'd say that is the main reason SO is in the title of the article today.
My post is primarily about .NET, but there's everything on SO, including stuff like REST, php, all versions of SQL, etc...
You know that SO is crowd-modded as well right? Try posting some crap on there and watch it get modded down and deleted.
What you said, except for an SSL tunnel instead of opening ports. Once you're in the network, vnc will work just as well. Surprised nobody else has mentioned VNC, it is THE solution for family remote support lol.
Well... they didn't know what "The Onion" was. And ya they are looking to poke the US in the eye, shame for them the ISPs already deployed their monitoring system.
what indeed? I wonder if N. Korea knows exactly what they're offering here. It sounds like they don't, or that it's a hoax. Either way, TPB has at the very least another host willing to take it.
I don't think they know what they're doing, they've censored most of the content that TPB serves, and now they want TPB to serve it out of their country? Sounds off...
what a load of horseshit, the science isn't all there yet, but realize that our science is far from complete, however if you've ever been around a dog for an extended amount of time, you'd notice there's a bit more going in how dogs and humans relate. This is a matter of common sense over science, and this research is trying to bring the latter back in league.
An obvious example would be mood: http://www.petplace.com/dogs/can-dogs-sense-our-emotions/page1.aspx , there's many more.
I believe it's called taking pride in your work. Less and less of that going around, but yes the people at Valve would have to enjoy what they do (making games, coding) to succeed there. And there's tons of programmers who as an equivalent to your example contribute to open source on the side, but I don't know, maybe there's something unnatural about sitting behind a computer 40 hours a week that leads to the overall trend of high job turn over and a dis rest among the workforce?
That's more or less what welfare was and still is to some extent.
Water? No anti-gravity generators yet? Why not?
http://blogs.ajc.com/bob-barr-blog/2010/02/01/americans-say-%E2%80%9Cno%E2%80%9D-to-medical-database/
Obama wants to do the same thing with medical records.
I'm also a bit conflicted on the security aspect of the matter, what would any non-pedo's motive be for stealing / compromising this data? The only thing is it becomes a true permanent record in the sense that it can be easily retrieved 20 years down the line. But, another interesting aspect is, nobody that I know of that employees people actually looks up grades and kinda just take your word for it, could that change?
And yet another interesting aspect is how we separate the privacy of 18. Could this erode that line?
The way I see it is:
1. Games innovate coding techniques a lot of times, algorithms, methods, best practices, etc... :)
2. Business apps innovate the methodologies, techniques, and things related to saving the business money by streamlining processes, pretty sure MVC came out of this, but MVC is NOT for games by any means. Agile though...
Responsibly getting rid of the stuff, yes, it can cost money.
That makes sense, so like a thread = entire server kind of scope from my example. Is it really appropriate to call it a database, or a smart distributed cache? In addition to local data interacting faster with local data, memory is even faster, I'd imagine that would make it a ways more complicated to design/implement though.
why you don't google your false facts before posting is beyond me: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_education , but it's a bit more than 400 by a few thousand years. You might be thinking > the history of the red bricked school building or something.
What the difference between threading an app and sharding it are? I'm kinda leaning towards writing this off as a bunch of theoretical BS, not the kind that makes sense either. Database servers are the highest load servers on most networks, distributing data process to them sounds idiotic at best.
It can, I'm specifically referring to the common business user, of whom I've seen acts of stupidity that never cease to amaze me. To have them write any sort of code is hilarious, they'd have to prove that they can handle admin rights on their local machine first without putting in a ticket weekly. Let me emphasis again, since there seems to be a mental blockade here or something: I'm talking about non-IT personnel as the article suggests. Oh, and I use shells all the time, but for scripting, not coding, google the difference or something.
Interesting, but how does that work? Recruiters work based on commission, so if Habib fluffs his resume and then gets hired, and his team recognizes he can't tell .NET from C++, wouldn't that person get fired and the recruiter subsequently barred for not submitting a qualified candidate? What's crazy is at some bigger shops this recognition can take years, so I guess there's a slim grey margin to walk there, but still lame.
On the surface, the ISPs are saying that this system is to help inform the public of copyright violations, and better help secure their networks or some BS like that. That's ALL that matters, hold em to it, if you get taken to court and evidence is presented to you from this system, the first question I'd ask is how do you know this data resides on my computer? Since a person != an IP address then that suddenly becomes very difficult. They cannot hack you, that's illegal. All they can do is associate an IP address on a tracker.
I think the biggest change is that people in many fields will be using programming as a tool in their non-programming job. This is already the case, but it is largely informal
My point to you is this isn't and will never be true as far as jobs are concerned.
When you say that I think of Joe from sales, and I think about how I'd never let anybody from that department have even a little bit more access than they need to.
Maybe you're thinking scripting or something? Even so, I'd never let anybody run an untested script, or untested code. If it's coming from a non-programmer I may not even justify QC time for it. Now, if as an admin, you write a script that say starts a certain service across a datacenter as part of an update, I wouldn't call that programming, I'd call that scripting to be clear (and you'd still have to test it). I like to think of programs as something produced through a compiler (web dev exception!)
That won't work because there's too many people who actually rely on those subsidies to feed and cloth their children. They're kind of the future of our race and all, I'm sure you spare a dollar or two.
The day I take responsibility for other people's kids in any way shape or form is the day that device to stab people in the face over the internet gets invented.