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User: Koutarou

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Comments · 103

  1. Re:In the US? on Japan's Final Pager Provider To End Its Service In 2019 (bbc.com) · · Score: 1

    Not guaranteed, just orders of magnitude more reliable in places with shoddy mobile phone reception.

    I'm in Japan and carried a pager until about 10 years ago when the major carrier shut down their service. Within the first month our on-call people missed multiple pages due to signal-related issues.

  2. Still not worthwhile on Japanese Passport Now World's Most Powerful (cnn.com) · · Score: 1

    As a japanese resident of over 20 years I still wouldn't give up my current citizenship to naturalize even though it'd be easy.

  3. For certain types of authentication you do need to store plaintext passwords - the traditional two types of logins used for dialups/pppoe are PAP and CHAP. PAP allows you to have password hashes on the auth server but transmits plaintext on the wire/air. Conversely CHAP hashes on the wire/air but requires the plaintext password to be available on the auth server due to the nature of the protocol. You choose your points of vulnerability.

  4. Re: I'm shocked, shocked! on 'How We Made Starship Troopers' (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    The one consistent about Heinlein books was Heinlein blatantly shoveling his political views at the time (which changed over the years) down your throat.

  5. Re:Hard to support on Some Telcos and ISPs are Frustrating IPv6 Adoption (guardian.ng) · · Score: 1

    What subnetting? Nearly everything in v6 is a /64.

  6. Re: NAT (IPv4 Address sharing) is not security. on Some Telcos and ISPs are Frustrating IPv6 Adoption (guardian.ng) · · Score: 1

    Trying to scan a v6 /64 subnet (what a consumer gets 98% of the time) is like trying to find a single machine in the entire public v4 internet.

  7. Re:Why? Which features? on Mozilla To End All Firefox Support For XP, Vista In June 2018 (bleepingcomputer.com) · · Score: 2

    Your arguments against Unicode are pretty weaksauce. If you want strong basis to criticize it, I suggest reading about Han unification and the clusterfuck it really is.

    Over 136,000 characters in Unicode and people still can't make their name display right without quirky variant selectors.

  8. Re:Aww, Winchesters on What Bell Labs Was Like C.1967 (theguardian.com) · · Score: 2

    They were still in use at Bell Labs in 1997 when I left. On Vaxen.

  9. Bug Hunting on Ask Slashdot: How Much Did Your Biggest Tech Mistake Cost? · · Score: 1

    Found a gaping goatse-sized security vulnerability in a package that had been outsourced and the original contractors long since gone.

    It was less expensive to just kill the product which we had been selling for about 3 years than to re-engineer the thing from the ground up with new staff.

  10. Re:Are there alternatives? on FTDI Reportedly Bricking Devices Using Competitors' Chips. · · Score: 1

    There are dozens of alternative chips that can be used:

    Prolific (have had their own driver sabotage issues in the past and even the genuine ones are kind of crappy)
    Silicon Labs
    WinChipHead (I have these on my Arduino-compatibles, seem to work OK)
    More chips than I can rattle off from Microchip and Atmel
    And a bunch of others.

  11. Re:Elephant in the room on Intel's Haswell-E Desktop CPU Debuts With Eight Cores, DDR4 Memory · · Score: 1

    Around 1990 I came up with a guideline that a power user should always spend USD500 on memory for their desktop. That target roughly held true for over 15 years until the price of memory plummeted in the mid-2000s and you couldn't fit that much in.

  12. Re:Black hole? on Sony Forgets To Pay For Domain, Hilarity Ensues · · Score: 1

    SSL certs are pretty trivial to track in Nagios or whatever your monitoring software of choice is.

    No two domain registrars seem to format their WHOIS data the same though, making it a lot harder.

  13. Spelling on One Year Since John McAfee Fled Belize · · Score: 1

    There is no hyphen in expat. Sorry, pet peeve.

  14. Re:Does it fly because of the helium? on 6TB Helium-Filled Hard Drives Take Flight · · Score: 1

    Explosive bolts for jettisoning failing drives.

    Stand clear!

  15. Ruins all my fun on 6TB Helium-Filled Hard Drives Take Flight · · Score: 1

    This takes away the fun I used to have with old failing hard drives: Install a webserver in a test rig with webcam pointed at the disk sitting out on a workbench, then remove the top cover and see how long it would live.

  16. Obvious Solution on Equipment Failure May Cut Kepler Mission Short · · Score: 1

    Just send the space shuttle up to fix it.

    Oh wait...

  17. Re:And what makes you think that would be better? on Some Windows XP Users Can't Afford To Upgrade · · Score: 1

    I've seen specialized stuff in production on 2.6 as recently as a couple years ago.

  18. Re:Iran and Syria Cannot Stop Tor on Japanese Police Urge ISPs To Block Tor · · Score: 3, Informative

    FLET's is not filtered at NTT's level. It all gets passed off to the individual ISPs who have to handle transit and filtering themselves.

    au Hikari is a different situation.

    Disclaimer: I work for a japanese ISP.

  19. Re:Why are people not being alerted? on Misconfigured Open DNS Resolvers Key To Massive DDoS Attacks · · Score: 1

    During an earlier DNS amplification attack we actually identified over 1000 of our customers that had their CPE devices misconfigured to expose the onboard resolver to the internet at large.

    After contacting them we had a less than 1% rectification rate.

  20. Re:How to do rate limiting? on Misconfigured Open DNS Resolvers Key To Massive DDoS Attacks · · Score: 1

    There are some patches for bind that surfaced about 6 months ago during some previous large-scale DNS amplification attacks.

    I'd check nanog or bind-users mailing list archives around that time.

  21. Re:Thoughts from MaraDNSâ(TM) implementer on Misconfigured Open DNS Resolvers Key To Massive DDoS Attacks · · Score: 1

    And of course with this "feature" it will never support DNSSEC ever.

  22. Re:Accidentally, or not? on Misconfigured Open DNS Resolvers Key To Massive DDoS Attacks · · Score: 1

    As often as not it is a judgement call of cost to fix vs. risk.

    We have the situation where we have a pair of open resolvers whose addresses have been constant for the past 17 years. We have about a quarter million customers, some who have those addresses embedded into devices whose passwords have been long since forgotten.

    The amount of support time needed to deal with these customers from putting in ACLs to the resolvers would run into the many many thousands of staff-hours.

    As we were affected by a somewhat similar attack (a DNS amplification DDoS but with different mechanics, bouncing queries off of CPE with open forwarding resolvers) last year we drop TYPE=ANY queries (I've yet to see a legitimate production query of that type ever) and rate-limit queries but access lists on the servers would require such a huge expense that its not likely to happen any time soon.

  23. Re:let's see on WotC Releases Old Dungeons & Dragons Catalog As PDFs · · Score: 1

    USD 5 in 1979 works out to USD 16 today, give or take.

  24. Re:If it doesn't run XBMC... on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 1

    You can hack xbmc to make it use MX Player (which does do proper hardware accelleration on rk3066 sticks) do the heavy lifting.

  25. Re:Compare to RK3066 on Raspberry Pi vs. Cheap Android Dongle: Embarrassment of (Cheap) Riches · · Score: 1

    Rockchip is one of the most (if not the most) source-release-hostile of all the chinese SoC makers.