Based on the relativity theory though, humans are pretty much earthbound, Mars at best. 1 light year = guess what?
To achieve anything significant in the universe, it's pretty obvious it needs to be broken.
All of our theories, laws and measurements are earth based and earth bound.
Now Einstein's theory is probably 100% on planet earth in our current physics model, but I'ma laugh if you say it applies to a place in space thousands of light years away. It very well may, but neither you nor I can prove that, and pixelated images from a space telescope aren't going to reverse that chain of thinking.
Also Einstein wasn't aware of the physics picture we have going on right now with quantum mechanics and subatomic particles.
I think the goal is to ultimately evolve our physics model to compensate for new discoveries and hopefully utilize them.
It's all speculation at this point, I'm certainly not saying it's going to be broken by a long shot, but as I stated at the top, it needs to be to coincide with all those sci-fi movies and keeping an open mind never hurt anyone.
I'd take a one size fits all cure for cancer before this shit though.
So if the email is older than 6 months they can request it w/o warrant? If my phone record is older than 6 months can they view that? Sounds like a step in the right direction, but a partial victory at best, i believe the feds can wait to charge somebody with a crime well past 6 months, whether the evidence is still there is another story.
Also, WHO you call isn't accessible without a warrant either, so I don't know, seems like a partial victory.
then your missing out, I don't use very many, but I've found crazy ones like image referrer spoofers and of course ol trusty firebug and that mini forest of tools.
I use IE when I don't use firefox, it's slow as hell, but google needs to stop marketing chrome as optional software with other installers for me to ever seriously try it. Don't own a Mac either, so that makes it easy.
I'm curious though, and if a Linux user can chime in that would be great, how is firefox doing on the better Linux distros (!= Ubuntu or Fedora or the like)
I remember the Linux version being superior to the windows version in terms of performance on the same hardware, I doubt windows was that bloated at the time to comp for the performance difference (was fast in both, a lot faster in Linux). I ask because the windows side has been going to shit since about 4.0.
$6B from one of THE corporations, there's only a few the size of google, and $6 doesn't phase anything in our economy, we are based off wall street and if anything finding google to be committing fraud would cause their stock to drop causing loss on wall street, but supposedly there's a rule to that where the money isn't quite gone, but I'm not an expert.
Seems more like google has a rainy day fund for when shit hits the fan in the states than anything, if you had a lot of eggs would u put them all in one basket? 6B to google isn't that epic either, why not evade / avoid on $100B to maximize profit from evasion?
It's the government there's nothing to prove, look at the laws being passed, is the world becoming a better place? or is the government trying to make more $ off its own citizens to fund itself?
It might seem absurd to you, but why should the RIAA get a 90% cut for this? They are clearly being a middle man rather than a productive entity, some artists start their own record labels and go that route, they manage to get onto Wal-Mart shelves - the RIAA. What if the system changed enough where an artist can sign a contract to get their cd produced without the RIAA and pay for the cost of production + labor from wherever via contract to sell X cds, etc... Sure you can fail hard at this, but such is life, don't publish shitty music, I'm sure Wal-Mart would QC what gets produced too.
Also, look around, CDS are 90% dead, digital mp3 is in, and yet the RIAA is still involved. Do you really need the RIAA to post your music to napster by uploading your mp3s? No?
I have a hard time believing there are still people who think the RIAA serves a legit purpose since they seem to be more focused on enforcing copyright than promoting new artists. Mainstream rock of late has kind of been displeasing to my ears. Then some fag on the radio calls Avenged the next Metallica, yawn.
The "right" thing to do as per the old internet standard is to publish it as a 0 day hack and then let the company fix it themselves.
1. It's the companies systems and they are responsible not you 2. Hacking is illegal 3. This is what happens when you try to reason with sheep who just don't get it
If this was a 0 day currently, it would have probably been patched already and no legal action threat would occur.
Also, at least in the states there are no circumstances a private entity can look at any of my information, it can contact law enforcement, and they can seize the computer, but otherwise SOL and that's the way it should be.
Eh... as an admin he is probably responsible for the inventory, I sure as hell wouldn't ask if I didn't have to (which I don't:P ). Move up a bit in career and repost:)
Sony only disclosed because PSN went down and people noticed. We don't know if they really disclosed everything or not. It's a little more complicated though, I think that with this being labeled as guidance is a step towards harder regulations on corporate security and consumer standards for privacy when submitting data to a corporation. As it stands it's unregulated and people have taken advantage of it.
when I buy an album, almost no money goes to the person actually making the music. The money goes to the RIAA who are the ones prosecuting people with that same money. Etc, we've all heard this before.
I'm dead serious though, if the artist made the money, and cds didn't cost $15 a pop (adds up very quick when u want new music, currently at the rate the artists typically make off the media, I can buy enough to last me years for $15 TOTAL), I would consider not supporting what TPB is doing, but since a bunch of assholes in suites who don't know how to play a musical instrument or have any talent are mooching off the industries, TPB has not only survived, it's thriving and the DNS nowadays is pretty hard to get at from my understanding.
It always works out though, and often times than not its a good idea to start over. I used OO sometimes when I had a free student MS office license because for a while there is was the faster performing product with all the same features. I never understood why they choose to pursue their own file format for the their docs, but now that I think of it, I don't think they could have legally recreated the MS office file formats for their use. That made it a little more complicated to use back in the day I guess. Then OO 3.0 came out, I was promised new features (none I care about), a new interface (looks more like MS office than ever), and the complimentary performance drop that only comes with a major release that has lost purity from its code base. Used ms office since, abiword is alright at best, the plug ins are cool. Then again I'm fine with notepad++ most of the time.
There are many ways to start a new life somewhere else though, web admins can work from anywhere with a wire to the www and make money. The whole case is BS though since piratebay is still up and running, what are they trying to prove here? That they can sentence people whenever they feel like it?
I love how when the courts get bad PR, nothing happens, when a company gets bad PR they go out of business. HMMMM
If this is the best they can come up with I'm disappointed. Also the national debt is nothing new in case you've been living under a rock or something, neither are off shore accounts for corporations, as somebody stated google would be just the first but it's too early to tell. Still waiting for joints to be sold next to cigs ftw. Also, seems the government makes up laws out of convenience nowadays.
Typically when this happens, for the developers to stay afloat, they try and offer software with their bundles (like chrome) as well as maybe a few "extra" features such as daemon tools did, that most people don't appreciate. Then again, they're probably just orphaned and will be picked up by another sponsor shortly. Also gotta wonder how such practices work under an open source license.
I somehow doubt with all their legal power, they'd be doing something that would cause the IRS to crack down on them. They haven't been struggling as a business, but if it's part of a larger crack down, I've got to ask, why now?
SSHD = ssh protocol daemon , my point is you don't run programs behind programming languages, you write programs in programming languages. He's talking about something that already exists so my question was a bit satirical. I'm not going to look into how to do it though for html, the correct thing to ask for would be ssh protocol integration into html5, so that you can make ssl calls using html 5, rather than have your web server redirect, or a web.config in.net. Point remains SSHD != HTML5 on any plain I'm familiar with.
If A2B can prove that they lost revenue by Spamhaus unjustly interfering with their business, they may have a case, but I can see Spamhaus arguing that blacklisting A2B is no different from putting a picket line in front of their building, which at least in the states falls under the 1st amendment and is perfectly legal. But just like people might have a problem with a picket line being outside a company for no just cause, as might there be a problem with blacklisting those who don't deserve it. Does seem like an over reaction though of 2 CEOs who haven't quite learned how to deal with things in a calm and professional manner to compromise.
Not fighting in meaningless wars
Not teaching soldiers shit they will never use
Using simulators instead of live training exercises especially in conjunction with #1
How will we defend ourselves? Well there's them oceans, and the ICBMs, and last but not least, the nukes.
Think of organic chemistry back when people believed in "life force" vitalism.
...and alchemy
Based on the relativity theory though, humans are pretty much earthbound, Mars at best. 1 light year = guess what?
To achieve anything significant in the universe, it's pretty obvious it needs to be broken.
All of our theories, laws and measurements are earth based and earth bound.
Now Einstein's theory is probably 100% on planet earth in our current physics model, but I'ma laugh if you say it applies to a place in space thousands of light years away. It very well may, but neither you nor I can prove that, and pixelated images from a space telescope aren't going to reverse that chain of thinking.
Also Einstein wasn't aware of the physics picture we have going on right now with quantum mechanics and subatomic particles.
I think the goal is to ultimately evolve our physics model to compensate for new discoveries and hopefully utilize them.
Also, in regards to not knowing what your talking about...
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18524911.600-13-things-that-do-not-make-sense.html
there's some food for thought in regards to shit nobody knows what they're talking about... including... YOU!
Lastly, there's a more than a few links on this from various places...
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/would-einsteins-theory-of-relativity-be-proved-false/187145-11.html
It's all speculation at this point, I'm certainly not saying it's going to be broken by a long shot, but as I stated at the top, it needs to be to coincide with all those sci-fi movies and keeping an open mind never hurt anyone.
I'd take a one size fits all cure for cancer before this shit though.
When the law was written, people downloaded their email to their computers and it was deleted from the server
The case happened in 2006?
Cite your shit, or stfu.
So if the email is older than 6 months they can request it w/o warrant? If my phone record is older than 6 months can they view that? Sounds like a step in the right direction, but a partial victory at best, i believe the feds can wait to charge somebody with a crime well past 6 months, whether the evidence is still there is another story.
Also, WHO you call isn't accessible without a warrant either, so I don't know, seems like a partial victory.
At the very least if your not running...
stumbleupon,
adblock plus
greasemonkey
then your missing out, I don't use very many, but I've found crazy ones like image referrer spoofers and of course ol trusty firebug and that mini forest of tools.
I use IE when I don't use firefox, it's slow as hell, but google needs to stop marketing chrome as optional software with other installers for me to ever seriously try it. Don't own a Mac either, so that makes it easy.
I'm curious though, and if a Linux user can chime in that would be great, how is firefox doing on the better Linux distros (!= Ubuntu or Fedora or the like)
I remember the Linux version being superior to the windows version in terms of performance on the same hardware, I doubt windows was that bloated at the time to comp for the performance difference (was fast in both, a lot faster in Linux). I ask because the windows side has been going to shit since about 4.0.
$6B from one of THE corporations, there's only a few the size of google, and $6 doesn't phase anything in our economy, we are based off wall street and if anything finding google to be committing fraud would cause their stock to drop causing loss on wall street, but supposedly there's a rule to that where the money isn't quite gone, but I'm not an expert.
Seems more like google has a rainy day fund for when shit hits the fan in the states than anything, if you had a lot of eggs would u put them all in one basket? 6B to google isn't that epic either, why not evade / avoid on $100B to maximize profit from evasion?
It's the government there's nothing to prove, look at the laws being passed, is the world becoming a better place? or is the government trying to make more $ off its own citizens to fund itself?
It might seem absurd to you, but why should the RIAA get a 90% cut for this? They are clearly being a middle man rather than a productive entity, some artists start their own record labels and go that route, they manage to get onto Wal-Mart shelves - the RIAA. What if the system changed enough where an artist can sign a contract to get their cd produced without the RIAA and pay for the cost of production + labor from wherever via contract to sell X cds, etc... Sure you can fail hard at this, but such is life, don't publish shitty music, I'm sure Wal-Mart would QC what gets produced too.
Also, look around, CDS are 90% dead, digital mp3 is in, and yet the RIAA is still involved. Do you really need the RIAA to post your music to napster by uploading your mp3s? No?
I have a hard time believing there are still people who think the RIAA serves a legit purpose since they seem to be more focused on enforcing copyright than promoting new artists. Mainstream rock of late has kind of been displeasing to my ears. Then some fag on the radio calls Avenged the next Metallica, yawn.
The "right" thing to do as per the old internet standard is to publish it as a 0 day hack and then let the company fix it themselves.
1. It's the companies systems and they are responsible not you
2. Hacking is illegal
3. This is what happens when you try to reason with sheep who just don't get it
If this was a 0 day currently, it would have probably been patched already and no legal action threat would occur.
Also, at least in the states there are no circumstances a private entity can look at any of my information, it can contact law enforcement, and they can seize the computer, but otherwise SOL and that's the way it should be.
Not sure what you can do with a computer webcam, there's webcam feeds like...
http://www.ciscopress.com/articles/article.asp?p=465446
Or if your one of "those" people
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lifelog
There's a ton of projects along those lines, webcams don't do much otherwise besides serve their initial purpose.
Donations are another option, so is the trash.
Try the boys and girls club or something along the lines of charity, I've gone this path before for getting rid of old IT equipment.
Eh... as an admin he is probably responsible for the inventory, I sure as hell wouldn't ask if I didn't have to (which I don't :P ). Move up a bit in career and repost :)
Parent you all are responding to is a fucktard, there is no valid argument here to warrant responses. All of you got TROLLED.
Sony only disclosed because PSN went down and people noticed. We don't know if they really disclosed everything or not. It's a little more complicated though, I think that with this being labeled as guidance is a step towards harder regulations on corporate security and consumer standards for privacy when submitting data to a corporation. As it stands it's unregulated and people have taken advantage of it.
There is an underlying problem to all this...
when I buy an album, almost no money goes to the person actually making the music. The money goes to the RIAA who are the ones prosecuting people with that same money. Etc, we've all heard this before.
I'm dead serious though, if the artist made the money, and cds didn't cost $15 a pop (adds up very quick when u want new music, currently at the rate the artists typically make off the media, I can buy enough to last me years for $15 TOTAL), I would consider not supporting what TPB is doing, but since a bunch of assholes in suites who don't know how to play a musical instrument or have any talent are mooching off the industries, TPB has not only survived, it's thriving and the DNS nowadays is pretty hard to get at from my understanding.
It always works out though, and often times than not its a good idea to start over. I used OO sometimes when I had a free student MS office license because for a while there is was the faster performing product with all the same features. I never understood why they choose to pursue their own file format for the their docs, but now that I think of it, I don't think they could have legally recreated the MS office file formats for their use. That made it a little more complicated to use back in the day I guess. Then OO 3.0 came out, I was promised new features (none I care about), a new interface (looks more like MS office than ever), and the complimentary performance drop that only comes with a major release that has lost purity from its code base. Used ms office since, abiword is alright at best, the plug ins are cool. Then again I'm fine with notepad++ most of the time.
There are many ways to start a new life somewhere else though, web admins can work from anywhere with a wire to the www and make money. The whole case is BS though since piratebay is still up and running, what are they trying to prove here? That they can sentence people whenever they feel like it?
I love how when the courts get bad PR, nothing happens, when a company gets bad PR they go out of business. HMMMM
If this is the best they can come up with I'm disappointed. Also the national debt is nothing new in case you've been living under a rock or something, neither are off shore accounts for corporations, as somebody stated google would be just the first but it's too early to tell. Still waiting for joints to be sold next to cigs ftw. Also, seems the government makes up laws out of convenience nowadays.
This is slashdot, martian nuclear holocaust ftw.
after stuxnet? :)
Totally feasible, would slashdot feel better if they were excluding muslims rather than the Chinese? :)
Typically when this happens, for the developers to stay afloat, they try and offer software with their bundles (like chrome) as well as maybe a few "extra" features such as daemon tools did, that most people don't appreciate. Then again, they're probably just orphaned and will be picked up by another sponsor shortly. Also gotta wonder how such practices work under an open source license.
I somehow doubt with all their legal power, they'd be doing something that would cause the IRS to crack down on them. They haven't been struggling as a business, but if it's part of a larger crack down, I've got to ask, why now?
SSHD = ssh protocol daemon , my point is you don't run programs behind programming languages, you write programs in programming languages. He's talking about something that already exists so my question was a bit satirical. I'm not going to look into how to do it though for html, the correct thing to ask for would be ssh protocol integration into html5, so that you can make ssl calls using html 5, rather than have your web server redirect, or a web.config in .net. Point remains SSHD != HTML5 on any plain I'm familiar with.
If A2B can prove that they lost revenue by Spamhaus unjustly interfering with their business, they may have a case, but I can see Spamhaus arguing that blacklisting A2B is no different from putting a picket line in front of their building, which at least in the states falls under the 1st amendment and is perfectly legal. But just like people might have a problem with a picket line being outside a company for no just cause, as might there be a problem with blacklisting those who don't deserve it. Does seem like an over reaction though of 2 CEOs who haven't quite learned how to deal with things in a calm and professional manner to compromise.
and from Michael Jackson.
are you talking about mixing a web language with a protocol?