the headline says that $2 billion is astonishing. but what are good benchmarks here? what is their revenue from windows phones? would another metric be better?
maybe a good compromise is an email client feature that shows you text-only previews of messages. then you can see what the message says without getting exposure to any of this junk. thoughts?
there's some merit to your argument, but the fact that Windows has images and fonts that can own your system is beyond absurd.
A compromise solution is that the preview pane shows text-only previews. That keeps the majority of the productivity, and should close these holes we speak of. Thoughts?
wow, that's a douchey thing to do! you probably made her feel really bad. how was she to know it wasn't allowed on your public network - you have a toc?
but with most email programs, even when you select the message it automatically shows in the preview pane. So if I select it in order to delete it, it shows in the preview and BAM. Or if I delete the ajoining message, the focus shifts to that message, and BAM. It's not all about (l)users here.
so when the summary says "the attacker would have to convince the user..." what they really mean is that it would happen automatically with no user interaction. I could send you an email, and just by clicking on it, it shows in the preview pane and BAM you're owned. This sounds like it would be an XP thing, but since it applies to office 2007 and 2010, presumably it applies to windows 7 as well?
I bet NSA is pissed, because one of their favorite pwnage tools is now public:(
What was the crime committed? If there was no crime, there will be no trial. You can't presuppose a trial, much less a defense, until you have first established that a crime has taken place.
in civil court you can sue anybody for anything. I could sue you for being a secret alien. i probably wouldn't win, and you may have recourse for wasting your time, but I could still get the issue in front of a judge (at least long enough for him to dismiss it).
criminal court is the same way - they can charge you with anything at any time. the judge may throw it out right away, and you may have recourse for wrongful prosecution. but they can still charge you with a crime and haul you before a judge.
And IP addresses don't even necessarily track a culprit to "a residence". I maintain an open WiFi connection ("guest" network) as a public service. It has a good signal and it is available to my whole neighborhood, including people walking by with a cellphone and even cars driving through the area.
dumbs. do you also provide dark alleys and money changing as a public service?
on the other hand, it makes sense to provide guest wifi so you can scrape the plaintext packets...
thanks for the good laugh. it's been a while since i've actually seen the movie. it's available to rent from amazon online for $3. maybe i'll splurge a bit (i mean, "work offsite")
what's your problem with my statements? he extorted the city by derailing the IT and refusing to give the password. note he carefully designed the whole IT system so only he would have the single key.
Fok uuuuuuuuuuu
Prönnnnnnnnnn
Fok u!!!!!
Fok u all!
Fok u hash hole!
the headline says that $2 billion is astonishing. but what are good benchmarks here? what is their revenue from windows phones? would another metric be better?
obv she knew she wasn't supposed to be doing it, but it's douchey when an adult plays a prank on a teen girl to make her feel bad.
facebook
maybe a good compromise is an email client feature that shows you text-only previews of messages. then you can see what the message says without getting exposure to any of this junk. thoughts?
there's some merit to your argument, but the fact that Windows has images and fonts that can own your system is beyond absurd.
A compromise solution is that the preview pane shows text-only previews. That keeps the majority of the productivity, and should close these holes we speak of. Thoughts?
wow, that's a douchey thing to do! you probably made her feel really bad. how was she to know it wasn't allowed on your public network - you have a toc?
but with most email programs, even when you select the message it automatically shows in the preview pane. So if I select it in order to delete it, it shows in the preview and BAM. Or if I delete the ajoining message, the focus shifts to that message, and BAM. It's not all about (l)users here.
+1 you must work in my IT department.
maybe it was a zero day, but no longer?
so when the summary says "the attacker would have to convince the user..." what they really mean is that it would happen automatically with no user interaction. I could send you an email, and just by clicking on it, it shows in the preview pane and BAM you're owned. This sounds like it would be an XP thing, but since it applies to office 2007 and 2010, presumably it applies to windows 7 as well?
I bet NSA is pissed, because one of their favorite pwnage tools is now public :(
They endorse *other people* doing the practice. Have you ever found anything good with a packet sniffer?
What was the crime committed? If there was no crime, there will be no trial. You can't presuppose a trial, much less a defense, until you have first established that a crime has taken place.
in civil court you can sue anybody for anything. I could sue you for being a secret alien. i probably wouldn't win, and you may have recourse for wasting your time, but I could still get the issue in front of a judge (at least long enough for him to dismiss it).
criminal court is the same way - they can charge you with anything at any time. the judge may throw it out right away, and you may have recourse for wrongful prosecution. but they can still charge you with a crime and haul you before a judge.
i think if you get the accounts you can get access to their hard drives, then really see what their intentions are.
And IP addresses don't even necessarily track a culprit to "a residence". I maintain an open WiFi connection ("guest" network) as a public service. It has a good signal and it is available to my whole neighborhood, including people walking by with a cellphone and even cars driving through the area.
dumbs. do you also provide dark alleys and money changing as a public service?
on the other hand, it makes sense to provide guest wifi so you can scrape the plaintext packets...
you can't do tldr on a single sentence. meme fail.
my intuition is there will be a lot of dongs
thanks for the good laugh. it's been a while since i've actually seen the movie. it's available to rent from amazon online for $3. maybe i'll splurge a bit (i mean, "work offsite")
I call "12345"! Nobody else can use it. it's the password for my luggage, so it's especially convenient for me.
I don't know where you're from, but I live in sf and I remember what a big deal this was.
what's your problem with my statements? he extorted the city by derailing the IT and refusing to give the password. note he carefully designed the whole IT system so only he would have the single key.