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User: deets52

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  1. Re:It's change for the sake of change on Ask Slashdot: Unity/Gnome 3/Win8/iOS — Do We Really Hate All New GUIs? · · Score: 1

    I could not run the latest, greatest Ubuntu on my "not so old" laptop. I had to go back a version or two to get it stable. Now I know that it is not 100% the GUI - probably far from it - but I did have to upgrade or in my case "downgrade"

  2. Re:Uhmmm... presvered skin? on German Paleontologists Find a 'Near-Perfect' Dinosaur Fossil · · Score: 1

    Also.... "loaned" to a museum? For crying out loud, why? Give it to them, sell it to them, or whatever...

    The reason is very simple. If you loan it to them then they can't turn around and sell the parts off to make money (fund raising) or decide its not worth the time and just throw it away or do anything that might destroy it. You will basically not get it back unless they say they no longer want it, then you find another museum who might want it.

  3. Re:Use a firewall on Verizon Wireless Changes Privacy Policy · · Score: 1

    A firewall won't prevent your ISP from telling advertisers that you like to google Nike shoes and them then targeting you with advertisements...

    No, but https://encrypted.google.com/ will. Not the best solution but hey, you let Google make money off of you and not your ISP.

  4. Disintegrator on Ask Slashdot: Best Way To Destroy Hard Drives? · · Score: 1

    The Gov't method for getting rid of devices - Disintergrator.

    For personal use (i.e. free as in beer, and easy) I found that encrypting a drive is much faster than wiping a drive. Take Truecrypt and encrypt the drive with a very long passphrase - 60 to 64 characters. Some software allows you to wipe out the encryption key, basically making the drive a brick - which is a better option (with no key to crack it is almost impossible to recover).

  5. Re:Yeah, class warfare. That's right. on White House Proposes "Wealthy Tax" · · Score: 1

    Warren buffet claims that he pays less in taxes than his executive secretary does.

    Sure he does - he has many more tax lawyers and accountants then she does - DUH!

    If Warren Buffet really wanted the rich to pay more then maybe he should pay all his back tax bills instead of fighting them in court. I mean, I am I the only person who thinks he's being a little bit more than hypocritical when he talks about *the rich* need to pay more taxes when he and his company have teams of accountants and lawyers fighting his tax bills on a regular basis?

  6. Re:How he got caught. on Fired Techie Created Virtual Chaos At Pharma Co. · · Score: 1

    I know for certain that if I were to do something like this, I would NOT use an installed operating system, and I would MOST CERTAINLY not use a Windows system! Not even from a public computer, from a library, or senior citizen's center!

    Why not?
    1. Use a Windows system
    2. Do something like that
    3. Boot up to DBAN
    4. ???
    5. Profit!

  7. Re:Scene from Jurassic Park on Digital Tech and the Re-Birth of Product Placement · · Score: 1

    Lex: "It's a Unix System, conforming to the Single Unix Specification of the Open Group! Unix is a registered trademark of the Open Group, and not to be used as a generic term! I know this!"

    More like: "It's a Unix System, I know this custom program that they were onsite creating (with over a million line of code - for dramatic effect!) and still to this day are debugging, even though the devolopers are not 100% sure how it will act."

    That's what I say now whenever asked about any program, no matter how complex or obscure it is as long as it's on Windows... "It's a Windows system... I know this".

  8. Re:Honest question on US and UK Zombies Demand Top Dollar · · Score: 1

    Well, I thought my network was a zombie wasteland because all the clients were Windows machines, but actually it was just in Garland, TX.

  9. Re:Obscurity Lost on Apple's Unlikely Security Mentor: Microsoft · · Score: 1

    Apple is still on safe due to obscurity

    No, that is just a false sense of security.

  10. Re:Uh, SSL? on ISPs Will Now Be Copyright Cops · · Score: 1

    Usenet (news groups) that supports binaries with SSL. Several things about this. You are not sharing, just leeching. ISP can't see into the traffic and MAFIAA can't get you're IP address - unless they are running the Usenet. Thats the good. The bad - It's not free - not too expensive but still not free. Lots of viruses in exe files, however that can be mitigated.
    The main advantage is that you are not sharing files. You just choose which ones you want to download. The *AA can't hit you for making them available (hence their bad accounting).

  11. Re:Beg to differ... on ISPs Will Now Be Copyright Cops · · Score: 1

    I was testing some packet captures one day and I was getting my ID/Pass from Outlook no problem (I mean it is plaintext, after all). I could not seem to get my wifes from her PC - I already know her ID/Pass (as she does mine) so no, I was not spying on her. I found the packets however, I hate to admit, it took a few minutes to realize the problem. She uses Thunderbird and I was using Outlook. Thunderbird uses base64 encoding which obfuscates the information by default (will revert to plaintext if base 64 is not accepted) and Outlook defaults to plain text. While this is not secure by any means since it is only encoded and not encrypted, but it is a step in the right direction. The whole point to this rambling is that many, or some, times there are protections in place, however you're only secure as the weakest link (in this case the end users software). The other take away is that Mozilla is more secure than M$ - and no, I didn't say they were secure, just a little more than the other guy.
    Having said that, yeah, I agree more ISP are not really that secure. They are stuck in the mentality of "the traffic never leaves our network" so they think it is safe. I guess they have never heard of bad employees.

  12. Re:Old hardware on Doom 3 Source Code To Be Released This Year · · Score: 1

    I still have my Personal Netware software we used for Doom (and Hexen, ROTT, etc). Speaking of Hexen - I had some good times turning people into chickens. I just can't seem to let go of that Personal Netware software, I have the box and everything (except the cables). I guess I could get my old PC's out and load my old Doom Diskettes and relive my old LAN party days (before there were actual "LAN Parties") I might have to dust off the old Axis and Allies game as well and go get a case of Dew.

  13. Re:What's wrong with IT? on What 'Consumerization of IT' Really Means For IT · · Score: 1
    WOW, let me guess... you never worked in IT (or any service position before). I would have to guess you're more on the sales side of things by your post (hint: point #2 gave it away).
    I was going to reply to each of your points but after reading your 2nd point I realized it was not worth it as you would never be able to understand the logic behind corporate governance or IT security policies.
    I will, however, leave you with the following since this would be as good a place as ever to try to get you started in the right direction.

    It seems that many IT departments see themselves as a law unto themselves, dictating to users what they can and can't do.

    No, it's the IT departments job to execute the policies dictated by the executive managment. This is done to better secure the environment.

    Pay attention to your customers and give them what they want.

    Wrong again (unless you're in sales like you). Give them what they NEED to do their job.

    You see things like many IT customers. "You're here to serve me". That is, of course, incorrect. IT is there to serve the business. Hate to tell you, but it really is about more than just you most of the time.

  14. Re:Thus spoke Ben on Facebook Exec: Online Anonymity Must Go Away · · Score: 2

    Um, Ben did use a pseudonyms (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mrs._Silence_Dogood). Granted that was when younger.

    He used many...
    Silence Dogood, Harry Meanwell, Alice Addertongue, Richard Saunders, and Timothy Turnstone to name a few.

  15. Re:How do you protect your mobile phone on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Protect Data On Android? · · Score: 1

    You're correct, hashes aren't reversible. The only (and easier) way to do that would be to create a collision with hashes, that is find another password that creates the same hash.

  16. Re:How do you protect your mobile phone on Ask Slashdot: How Do You Protect Data On Android? · · Score: 1

    By requiring the password to create it? The OS needs to create the hash from the supplied password, it wont just accept the hash passed to it.

  17. Re:Cue a gazillion posts... on MS-DOS Is 30 Years Old Today · · Score: 1

    alt+255
    I used to do that to hide files from people at work. Most people didn't even notice the extra lind in the dir output if you created a directory named with just one alt+255. The same with a space as the first character for the most part.

  18. Re:What did these execs expect? on Microsoft Betting on Bing for Mobile Search · · Score: 1

    Thats all MS has ever done. They have only been "on time" to the party twice and that was with Basic and DOS (and DOS was not even new but the market was). Since then they have relied on using their OS market share to drive everyone else out of the market by giving it away free with Windows - Internet Explorer, anyone. Times have changed and they can't do that anymore. I still remember being told, by MS themselves, in regards to several of their products "It's not the best, but it's free".

  19. Re:Maybe your have some phobias and prejudices? on Inside Las Vegas' Biggest Data Centre · · Score: 1

    An un-loaded gun is pretty useless.

    However an unloaded gun is safer and can be made loaded in a small number of seconds when carried in the manner I described.

    A loaded gun can be fired at you in a smaller number of seconds.

    The only time your weapon should be unloaded is when you hand it to someone.

  20. Re:Except .... on Police Increasingly Looking To Smartphones For Evidence · · Score: 1

    Fine. It shows it went to kinko's. I had to make some copies.

    And then to the FedEx processing center, then to the FedEx distribution center, then maybe to another FedEx location, then back to your house a day or two later along with the recipt of the transaction with FedEx. What do you think, someone from Kinko's is going to run it over to your house because it's right down the street? What you did was just raise suspicion on yourself. Making everyone remember you a lot more - "Yeah, I remember him, I wondered why the heck that guy was mailing something to his house that is 2 miles away. No one in the office could figure that out."