Since the internet is world wide, and it is impossible to limit this program to running just in the US and countries that might pose a threat... How would China or Russia feel about us infesting their computers with this spy software? How much different is it than finding a person that is a spy? It's punishable by death in many places. So should the makers of this software be punishable by death? Does the US really have a leg to stand on here? Just a thought.
Since the internet is world wide, and it is impossible to limit this program to running just in the US and countries that might pose a threat... How would China or Russia feel about us infesting their computers with this spy software? How much different is it than finding a person that is a spy? It's punishable by death in many places. So should the makers of this software be punishable by death? Does the US really have a leg to stand on here? Just a thought.
After decoding, it tries to run the application contained within. THAT is the security concern. There is an important difference.
Actually it tries to launch stuffit or another expander to automatically unencode the files.
So YD seems to be the major player right now. What with LinuxPPC pretty much down and out.
Has anyone tried Debian's PPC distro? Is it as good as their others?
What other PPC solutions are there?
Why not put pocket linux on it? That will take care of some of the UI problems.