Then don't use the same field every time. Encrypt the field names with salt and a time-based password. That'll deal with the blighters.... until they start doing entity counting or the like. Then you insert chaff... Well, there's the arms race for you.
$ telnet mailin-01.mx.aol.com 25 Trying 205.188.159.57... Connected to da.mx.aol.com. Escape character is '^]'. 220-rly-da05.mx.aol.com ESMTP mail_relay_in-da05.2; Thu, 17 Jan 2008 13:03:52 -0500 220-America Online (AOL) and its affiliated companies do not 220- authorize the use of its proprietary computers and computer 220- networks to accept, transmit, or distribute unsolicited bulk 220- e-mail sent from the internet. Effective immediately: AOL 220- may no longer accept connections from IP addresses which 220 have no reverse-DNS (PTR record) assigned.
All geeks are required to hate spam. It's in the by-laws, go check.
No, the patent system is intended to '... promote the progress of science...' (US Constitution, Article I) by giving inventors a monpoly on the invention for a limited amount of time, thus providing a monatary incentive to research new things.
That problem is dealt with using cache control HTTP headers. If you don't want it cached or only cached for a limited time, it's easy to tell the proxies that.
They could intentionaly suppress the image about 5% of the time, and berate users who enter thier password anyway. "If this were a real phishing site, you balance of $AMOUNT would have just been sent to $TERRORIST_ORGINIZATION. You're not a terrorist, are you?"
Indeed, the Administrator doesn't bypass file permissions, as root accounts on mose UNIX-like systems do. I know that LOCAL SYSTEM is above Administrator in terms of privs, but I don't know if it respects file premissions or not. Power Users and Administrators can elevate their privs to LOCAL SYSTEM on XP.
I will enjoy seeing them try to protect content from users on an operating system where the administratitive users is truely all powerful. (FYI, Administrator is not the most privledged account on a Windows system)
Pfft. I can memorize a randomly generated 12 character password after using it half a dozen times. Write it down, put it in my wallet, and burn it when I stop looking at it.
No, it's fucking stupid. Thier main login page still asks for your username and password in a form that is not encrypted (if you're cookied, it only needs the username). The available secret quetions are not that tough, either.
My girlfriend (a microbioligist) was recently offered an interview with Monsanto via a headhunter. She told the headhunter something along the lines of "I'm not working for those sleazy bastards".
Then don't use the same field every time. Encrypt the field names with salt and a time-based password. That'll deal with the blighters.... until they start doing entity counting or the like. Then you insert chaff... Well, there's the arms race for you.
This is one way to deal with it:
$ telnet mailin-01.mx.aol.com 25
Trying 205.188.159.57...
Connected to da.mx.aol.com.
Escape character is '^]'.
220-rly-da05.mx.aol.com ESMTP mail_relay_in-da05.2; Thu, 17 Jan 2008 13:03:52 -0500
220-America Online (AOL) and its affiliated companies do not
220- authorize the use of its proprietary computers and computer
220- networks to accept, transmit, or distribute unsolicited bulk
220- e-mail sent from the internet. Effective immediately: AOL
220- may no longer accept connections from IP addresses which
220 have no reverse-DNS (PTR record) assigned.
All geeks are required to hate spam. It's in the by-laws, go check.
SA-Exim can greylist based on spamassassin score. Messages with low spam scores go though without greylisting.
I saw your mention of mfm, and immediately thought "threesome" (male-female-male).
No, the patent system is intended to '... promote the progress of science ...' (US Constitution, Article I) by giving inventors a monpoly on the invention for a limited amount of time, thus providing a monatary incentive to research new things.
That problem is dealt with using cache control HTTP headers. If you don't want it cached or only cached for a limited time, it's easy to tell the proxies that.
(You) CAN-SPAM nullified state laws on the matter. Only ISPs can sue now, not individual recipiants.
The secure way to do this is SSL. The problem is that users are too stupid to understand how to use SSL to verify a site.
They phased out SSN as username, and if you still have that, you can change your username online.
They could intentionaly suppress the image about 5% of the time, and berate users who enter thier password anyway. "If this were a real phishing site, you balance of $AMOUNT would have just been sent to $TERRORIST_ORGINIZATION. You're not a terrorist, are you?"
You can opt out of TiVo sharing your viewing habits. I did. I have a hacked unit, and I can tell that it's being respected.
Yes, you can take ownership. I knew that. My point was that under windows the Administrator account normaly respects file permissions.
Indeed, the Administrator doesn't bypass file permissions, as root accounts on mose UNIX-like systems do. I know that LOCAL SYSTEM is above Administrator in terms of privs, but I don't know if it respects file premissions or not. Power Users and Administrators can elevate their privs to LOCAL SYSTEM on XP.
I will enjoy seeing them try to protect content from users on an operating system where the administratitive users is truely all powerful. (FYI, Administrator is not the most privledged account on a Windows system)
I've had a TI-89 for about 8 years. Never had any problems with it. It has made me lazy, though :(
No tracking. The catch is that you've got to run your own server.
I'm certian I saw a patch that lets you play tetris. Ah, here it is: http://www.movementarian.org/fscktris/fscktris.htm l
Oh, I get it! Privilege escalation!
Arp posioning?
Pfft. I can memorize a randomly generated 12 character password after using it half a dozen times. Write it down, put it in my wallet, and burn it when I stop looking at it.
I have 8/768 with comcast. I have looked at my modem config file, it is actualy provisioned at 8800/768
./speed_down.sh
./speed_up.sh
#
2006-06-01 22:04:44 9091kbps
#
2006-06-01 22:19:03 642kbps (note that i traffic shape outbound traffic, and did not disable it for this test.)
You laugh, but take a look at coLinux (http://www.colinux.org/). Windows runs debian just fine.
No, it's fucking stupid. Thier main login page still asks for your username and password in a form that is not encrypted (if you're cookied, it only needs the username). The available secret quetions are not that tough, either.
My girlfriend (a microbioligist) was recently offered an interview with Monsanto via a headhunter. She told the headhunter something along the lines of "I'm not working for those sleazy bastards".
You're not the only one. I have two WRT54Gs, and I would not have bought them if they weren't easily hackable.