The $2.6 trillion in the Social Security Trust fund, from the perspective of the federal government, is $2.6 trillion in payment obligations (that is, spend it once, you can't spend it again).
If you go here and use the default settings for the time series report, you will see that the trust fund holds about $2.6 trillion in special government bonds:
Wait, is Walmart really an extremely likely place for a car to be stolen?
I can believe it in areas where there are chop shops (or whatever) that will move popular stolen parts, but in smaller population centers where that activity is a little harder to hide, not so much.
You is flailing around a bit. I pushed back on your comment because it was general and reactionary.
You've explained why you think there might be something illegal about the pictures. You apparently don't have a concrete example of something that is illegal about the pictures (this isn't a terrible thing, but it speaks to why I find your comment reactionary).
You still haven't explained what you think is unethical about the project.
I never said that I needed legislation in order to distinguish between right and wrong and I don't see anything in my comments that implies it, so I don't really see any reason to address that statement further.
Yeah, but it sort of hollows out the whole argument with the user claiming they were unaware.
And I'd be a lot more interested in what aspects you find unethical and what laws you think were broken than I am in an analogy that isn't quite related to the situation.
It looks like the password hash is only used to decrypt the session key provided by the authentication server. So the session is maintained with that key and the password and password hash can be discarded.
If the device is compromised with a valid session key, it should be possible to terminate access once the compromise is noticed, simply by revoking that session key (and the device shouldn't contain the information necessary to obtain a new session key).
I agree that mysidia was mostly talking about email, but given the hilarious tendency of people to over-generalize information, it seemed worthwhile to point out that much of the problem is in supporting protocols that require frequent authentication.
My actual maintenance costs over 45,000 miles are less than $2,000. That's including tires and engine work and then brakes. That's about 4.5 cents a mile.
I pay between 10 and 15 cents per mile for gasoline.
Democracy has never been an ideal, it has always been a compromise.
The debt ceiling 'crisis' is not the problem with Social Security.
The problem with social security is that even optimistic projections show it not being self sustaining more than a couple of more decades.
The $2.6 trillion in the Social Security Trust fund, from the perspective of the federal government, is $2.6 trillion in payment obligations (that is, spend it once, you can't spend it again).
If you go here and use the default settings for the time series report, you will see that the trust fund holds about $2.6 trillion in special government bonds:
http://www.ssa.gov/oact/progdata/investheld.html
Actually, your comment about property taxes does sound sort of bitchy.
If you take the current system of progressive taxation as a given, it doesn't require much explanation.
Wow.
If you have really used *all* of the open source VCSs, it seems unlikely that you have actually used them to do anything.
Adobe Reader X is sandboxed. I think later versions of Foxit are also.
And readers that don't support javascript don't need it quite as much.
Wait, is Walmart really an extremely likely place for a car to be stolen?
I can believe it in areas where there are chop shops (or whatever) that will move popular stolen parts, but in smaller population centers where that activity is a little harder to hide, not so much.
Just don't let him take the ax into the basement.
On a phone, hardware acceleration should generally result in better battery life.
On every page.
That's a nice feature.
I don't really remember the live action series.
My comment is based on the notion that there could be quite a few cartoon episodes for the same budget as a movie with so-so effects.
You is flailing around a bit. I pushed back on your comment because it was general and reactionary.
You've explained why you think there might be something illegal about the pictures. You apparently don't have a concrete example of something that is illegal about the pictures (this isn't a terrible thing, but it speaks to why I find your comment reactionary).
You still haven't explained what you think is unethical about the project.
I never said that I needed legislation in order to distinguish between right and wrong and I don't see anything in my comments that implies it, so I don't really see any reason to address that statement further.
Yeah, but it sort of hollows out the whole argument with the user claiming they were unaware.
And I'd be a lot more interested in what aspects you find unethical and what laws you think were broken than I am in an analogy that isn't quite related to the situation.
They attached stickers with text explaining the project (in the local languages).
Here's how they went about it:
http://senseable.mit.edu/backtalk/
Now you can provide a deeper explanation about how it was unethical, rather than accusatory hand-waving.
Animation was a great match for the throwaway absurdity that is The Tick. A movie would probably be fun, but I'd rather see another cartoon series.
I have no experience with Kerberos, but just reading the Wikipedia entry:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerberos_(protocol)
It looks like the password hash is only used to decrypt the session key provided by the authentication server. So the session is maintained with that key and the password and password hash can be discarded.
If the device is compromised with a valid session key, it should be possible to terminate access once the compromise is noticed, simply by revoking that session key (and the device shouldn't contain the information necessary to obtain a new session key).
It would be painful to turn off the internet. No machine could stop us from doing it.
It's going to be a long time before that second statement is no longer true.
I agree that mysidia was mostly talking about email, but given the hilarious tendency of people to over-generalize information, it seemed worthwhile to point out that much of the problem is in supporting protocols that require frequent authentication.
If the app-server combo has a decent session protocol, the app can get a session token from the server and discard the password.
Stay away from airports.
Also, casinos.
My 14 year old CRT tv is fine. My 3 year old LCD monitor has some pixels that take a while to wake up and is nearly garbage.
My actual maintenance costs over 45,000 miles are less than $2,000. That's including tires and engine work and then brakes. That's about 4.5 cents a mile.
I pay between 10 and 15 cents per mile for gasoline.
Autos coast in gear, pumping the engine, which uses 0 fuel.