Did was some big product launch? The free Maps API wasn't a good choice.
js?key=AIzaSyDzGM_p6TFSrR7xtvan6loYKJcqJ5hx2yE:40 You have exceeded your daily request quota for this API. We recommend enabling billing to get a higher quota: https://developers.google.com/...
By pure coincidence, Google has just integrated a LastPass competitor into Chrome. You should send all of your passwords to Google and stop being cautious about putting too much trust in any one vendor. #badsecurityadvice
Actually Apple had it working pretty much flawlessly in the late 80's (I used to admin a few thousand devices with a couple other people). DDP and related protocols.
I thought in the late 90's we'd have an IP version of that with mDNS, PDF printing everywhere, and everything would "just work" by 2005. Ha!
Give me a break. MINIX provides nothing that enables this.
If the ME can image the drive remotely it can certainly change/etc/ssh/sshd_config and/root/.ssh/authorized_keys with a small driver (ext2, etc.). GRUB is way tinier and can handle basic ext2 stuff.
It doesn't matter if the ME is only listening to the LAN. Give a decent blackhat a week and you'll have a package that deploys to an ad network which exploits the browser, then exploits the router, then exploits the ME and opens a remote C&C channel on the next reboot. If you need it quick, poison pid 0 via memory injection and the admin will reboot the server quickly when it 'oddly misbehaves'.
Hilarious. Look up deficit spending and debt monetization. Your unborn grandchildren and the poor are paying for stupid redundant satellite pork programs - your taxes do not.
With Qualcomm execs thinking they can extract percentages of device prices from manufacturers rather than just charging a fair price for a part, and their other aggressive and anti-competitive lawsuits they have going, shareholders should welcome new management before the company goes the way of SCO and Oracle/Java. We've heard Apple is already preparing to jump to Intel for radio silicon and others will rapidly follow, importantly and especially on the high end.
And that's without being a fan of Broadcomm at all - they've been really bad with security, documentation, NDA's and support to the point of shooting themselves in the foot with selling their MIPS platform, etc. into the embedded linux space. I'm willing to bet that their move to Singapore will be good for the ecosystem though.
If it was in flames then the best option is it was caused by some combustible that was on the landing pad that got ignited and started to burn the rocket. Worst option is there was a fuel leak that almost caused the rocket to explode.
Did you even see the video? There was a bit of kerosene burning on the rocket, after it landed in a column of flame. Rockets can handle flames. The commentator described it as "a little bit toasty", which, yes, probably means a little bit more refurbishment before they launch this rocket again.
Hopefully they solve this before they use this for launching people.
They're not going to land any people on rockets until BRF which uses methane, not kero.
Have them go the way of Enron and Ashley Whatshername...
Equifax is a "systemically important financial institution" like AIG, according to FedGov. You are (paradoxically) asking for bailouts, more risky behavior, and creeping fascism.
No. I've been running ZoL for almost a decade. It's constantly being bitten by kernel API changes and the kernel devs will break ZFS without a second thought and it happens all the time.
It's been a little while since we've been three months without a working ZFS-head build on Fedora (or other newish kernels) but there's still nothing stopping it from happening.
Dual-licensing to something GPL-compatible would allow parts of the SPL/ZFS stack to be brought in-kernel, even if most of it stayed outside, at least maintaining compatibility when a new kernel release is cut.
It's so bad that I moved all of my main storage to FreeBSD, even though I prefer to run linux for most everything else. My laptops stay with ZoL but for application compatibility, not because it's easy to maintain.
Anybody who thinks they will start a new fork of ZFS to be quickly in-kernel is seriously delusional and has a month's worth of reading github issues to look forward to, but easing compatibility and distribution would be a heck of a good start.
Yeah, I would have bought two today at $49. Why are these more expensive than a cheap Android phone? I hope Snapchat isn't selling these at cost because they got ripped off on manufacturing. If they did pay $23 a piece for them and they aren't moving, then obviously the thing to do is to lower the price. So why don't they? The charging cable is $10? C'mon, is the idea really to make these things into status symbols?
but now instead of holding the phone up and seeing the road in their peripheral, they're trying to be sneaky by holding the phone down on their lap... so they're looking at the floor
Precisely. The answer to the OP's question is "texting laws". Texting laws are what has caused the spike in deaths.
I'm very much against distracted driving, but this law is just bad news all-around... I'm not sure how to approach the problem, though.
Well, first stop killing people. Repeal the texting laws. Most problems cannot be solved with the ban hammer, and in fact, most are made worse by it.
Then, there are a few things to do. Education/simulation, accelerating the adoption of steering assist, backing the hell down on CAFE standards so people can actually afford to buy new cars with the steering assist, and of course funding research into self-driving cars.
How about the US stops blowing up random Arabs for trillions of dollars and puts just half of that money into self-driving cars? The other half can go to solar panels and better batteries. The trick is getting the military-finance complex switched over to cars and power systems because they'll never give up perpetual war as long as the People are happy to line their pockets with mountains of gold.
Oh, and law enforcement does not have "backdoor access", at least not the way that I would interpret the phrase.
PRISM wasn't exactly a backdoor either, but it was effectively.
NSLs provide access to metadata only, not content
Do you have a source for that? NSL's, generically, have no such inherent limitation (cf. Lavabit). is Google under an NSL to transmit all metadata to the US Government? This sounds like news.
I think the better question is : have you seen any evidence whatsoever that Kaspersky is anything but what they have always represented* or are you just jumping on the "Russian Hackers! Trump is Illegitimate!" bandwagon?
Please link evidence any you've seen - I've apparently missed the entirety of it.
* Russian hackers straddling the white/greyhat line, selling an AV product based on that position.
I've been trying to figure out the economics of that. It's dirt cheap to buy on disc, I can't imagine they make much money that way, so why not get a bit of revenue from Netflix viewings too? Is Netflix a really bad deal for them, worse than the physical sales?
You know how The Beatles and Taylor Swift just recently relented and licensed their material for online sales? Smart people told them that fifteen years ago, the economics never changed, but the economic luddites were only recently convinced.
I canceled my Netflix earlier this year (joined fifteen years ago) with the latest price increase and the drastically falling catalog. Maybe in ten more years the market will have stabilized and the catalog will be back and micropayments among producers and distributors will have been formalized.. The reason Netflix doesn't care about people like me is that I want "to watch X" but most people want "to find something to watch", so they're way better off doing what they're doing than to pandering to my eclectic wants.
Having been an early adopter of new phones since the early Motorola flip phones I was a little sceptical about this phone but I can that it is without doubt and by a long margin the best phone I have ever owned.
You're not going to get paid for astroturfing if nobody believes you. Try: using a registered account, including some product details (more than zero is a good start) and tone down the superlatives a bit. Every product has a downside, but by mentioning those and minimizing them people will tend to believe your ads more.
You can attack his syntax all you want, but since he was clearly describing behavior different than the behavior of wpa_supplicant, the meaning is clear that he is suggesting the behavior he illustrates be used instead.
So, strangely, it almost seems like Windows and iOS are doing the right thing here. Allowing replay of packet 3 is the source of the attack and actually makes no sense from a cryptographic standpoint. Crap on MS and Apple all you want, but someone was paying attention and said "nooooope".
Yup. And they chose to not disclose the vulnerability they discovered.
This is where a guild system would be a useful overlay on the corporate system.
Did was some big product launch? The free Maps API wasn't a good choice.
js?key=AIzaSyDzGM_p6TFSrR7xtvan6loYKJcqJ5hx2yE:40 You have exceeded your daily request quota for this API.
We recommend enabling billing to get a higher quota: https://developers.google.com/...
By pure coincidence, Google has just integrated a LastPass competitor into Chrome. You should send all of your passwords to Google and stop being cautious about putting too much trust in any one vendor. #badsecurityadvice
Actually Apple had it working pretty much flawlessly in the late 80's (I used to admin a few thousand devices with a couple other people). DDP and related protocols.
I thought in the late 90's we'd have an IP version of that with mDNS, PDF printing everywhere, and everything would "just work" by 2005. Ha!
Give me a break. MINIX provides nothing that enables this.
If the ME can image the drive remotely it can certainly change /etc/ssh/sshd_config and /root/.ssh/authorized_keys with a small driver (ext2, etc.). GRUB is way tinier and can handle basic ext2 stuff.
It doesn't matter if the ME is only listening to the LAN. Give a decent blackhat a week and you'll have a package that deploys to an ad network which exploits the browser, then exploits the router, then exploits the ME and opens a remote C&C channel on the next reboot. If you need it quick, poison pid 0 via memory injection and the admin will reboot the server quickly when it 'oddly misbehaves'.
"Cosmic rays" are so 2013...
or was that corporate profits?
Hilarious. Look up deficit spending and debt monetization. Your unborn grandchildren and the poor are paying for stupid redundant satellite pork programs - your taxes do not.
Somebody wanted attention for their pet project. /. editor went along with it for one reason or another.
Plot twist: average /.'ers see through the political bullshit, foe the submitter.
With Qualcomm execs thinking they can extract percentages of device prices from manufacturers rather than just charging a fair price for a part, and their other aggressive and anti-competitive lawsuits they have going, shareholders should welcome new management before the company goes the way of SCO and Oracle/Java. We've heard Apple is already preparing to jump to Intel for radio silicon and others will rapidly follow, importantly and especially on the high end.
And that's without being a fan of Broadcomm at all - they've been really bad with security, documentation, NDA's and support to the point of shooting themselves in the foot with selling their MIPS platform, etc. into the embedded linux space. I'm willing to bet that their move to Singapore will be good for the ecosystem though.
Literally:
They're already trying to create the narrative that Iran is in league with Bin Laden and needs to be attacked by the United States.
Trump has signed on to the Project for a New American Century.
If it was in flames then the best option is it was caused by some combustible that was on the landing pad that got ignited and started to burn the rocket. Worst option is there was a fuel leak that almost caused the rocket to explode.
Did you even see the video? There was a bit of kerosene burning on the rocket, after it landed in a column of flame. Rockets can handle flames. The commentator described it as "a little bit toasty", which, yes, probably means a little bit more refurbishment before they launch this rocket again.
Hopefully they solve this before they use this for launching people.
They're not going to land any people on rockets until BRF which uses methane, not kero.
Have them go the way of Enron and Ashley Whatshername...
Equifax is a "systemically important financial institution" like AIG, according to FedGov. You are (paradoxically) asking for bailouts, more risky behavior, and creeping fascism.
No. I've been running ZoL for almost a decade. It's constantly being bitten by kernel API changes and the kernel devs will break ZFS without a second thought and it happens all the time.
It's been a little while since we've been three months without a working ZFS-head build on Fedora (or other newish kernels) but there's still nothing stopping it from happening.
Dual-licensing to something GPL-compatible would allow parts of the SPL/ZFS stack to be brought in-kernel, even if most of it stayed outside, at least maintaining compatibility when a new kernel release is cut.
It's so bad that I moved all of my main storage to FreeBSD, even though I prefer to run linux for most everything else. My laptops stay with ZoL but for application compatibility, not because it's easy to maintain.
Anybody who thinks they will start a new fork of ZFS to be quickly in-kernel is seriously delusional and has a month's worth of reading github issues to look forward to, but easing compatibility and distribution would be a heck of a good start.
Yeah, I would have bought two today at $49. Why are these more expensive than a cheap Android phone? I hope Snapchat isn't selling these at cost because they got ripped off on manufacturing. If they did pay $23 a piece for them and they aren't moving, then obviously the thing to do is to lower the price. So why don't they? The charging cable is $10? C'mon, is the idea really to make these things into status symbols?
but now instead of holding the phone up and seeing the road in their peripheral, they're trying to be sneaky by holding the phone down on their lap... so they're looking at the floor
Precisely. The answer to the OP's question is "texting laws". Texting laws are what has caused the spike in deaths.
I'm very much against distracted driving, but this law is just bad news all-around... I'm not sure how to approach the problem, though.
Well, first stop killing people. Repeal the texting laws. Most problems cannot be solved with the ban hammer, and in fact, most are made worse by it.
Then, there are a few things to do. Education/simulation, accelerating the adoption of steering assist, backing the hell down on CAFE standards so people can actually afford to buy new cars with the steering assist, and of course funding research into self-driving cars.
How about the US stops blowing up random Arabs for trillions of dollars and puts just half of that money into self-driving cars? The other half can go to solar panels and better batteries. The trick is getting the military-finance complex switched over to cars and power systems because they'll never give up perpetual war as long as the People are happy to line their pockets with mountains of gold.
Oh, and law enforcement does not have "backdoor access", at least not the way that I would interpret the phrase.
PRISM wasn't exactly a backdoor either, but it was effectively.
NSLs provide access to metadata only, not content
Do you have a source for that? NSL's, generically, have no such inherent limitation (cf. Lavabit). is Google under an NSL to transmit all metadata to the US Government? This sounds like news.
This reads like a mirror of a rant from 1999 about how the hubs were crap, the cables expensive and variable, and the confusion rampant.
USB will never take off!
I think the better question is : have you seen any evidence whatsoever that Kaspersky is anything but what they have always represented* or are you just jumping on the "Russian Hackers! Trump is Illegitimate!" bandwagon?
Please link evidence any you've seen - I've apparently missed the entirety of it.
* Russian hackers straddling the white/greyhat line, selling an AV product based on that position.
I've been trying to figure out the economics of that. It's dirt cheap to buy on disc, I can't imagine they make much money that way, so why not get a bit of revenue from Netflix viewings too? Is Netflix a really bad deal for them, worse than the physical sales?
You know how The Beatles and Taylor Swift just recently relented and licensed their material for online sales? Smart people told them that fifteen years ago, the economics never changed, but the economic luddites were only recently convinced.
I canceled my Netflix earlier this year (joined fifteen years ago) with the latest price increase and the drastically falling catalog. Maybe in ten more years the market will have stabilized and the catalog will be back and micropayments among producers and distributors will have been formalized.. The reason Netflix doesn't care about people like me is that I want "to watch X" but most people want "to find something to watch", so they're way better off doing what they're doing than to pandering to my eclectic wants.
Having been an early adopter of new phones since the early Motorola flip phones I was a little sceptical about this phone but I can that it is without doubt and by a long margin the best phone I have ever owned.
You're not going to get paid for astroturfing if nobody believes you. Try: using a registered account, including some product details (more than zero is a good start) and tone down the superlatives a bit. Every product has a downside, but by mentioning those and minimizing them people will tend to believe your ads more.
If the network is using TKIP there's a chance of content injection. AES-CCMP is safe from that, for now. More here.
This is useful reading, even though it doesn't precisely describe the nature of the RSA key generation problem:
https://sites.google.com/a/chr...
No modpoints, but have a "hear, hear"!
You can attack his syntax all you want, but since he was clearly describing behavior different than the behavior of wpa_supplicant, the meaning is clear that he is suggesting the behavior he illustrates be used instead.
So, strangely, it almost seems like Windows and iOS are doing the right thing here. Allowing replay of packet 3 is the source of the attack and actually makes no sense from a cryptographic standpoint. Crap on MS and Apple all you want, but someone was paying attention and said "nooooope".
Yup. And they chose to not disclose the vulnerability they discovered.
This is where a guild system would be a useful overlay on the corporate system.