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User: ymgve

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  1. "Simple" solution on SSDs Cause Crisis For Digital Forensics · · Score: 1

    The solution to this would be to add a new command to the ATA spec, call it FREEZE or something. If a drive receives this command, it won't do any writing/erasing, neither on its own or in response to ATA commands. Then you just create write blockers that also send this command.

    Of course, this both requires new drives and new write blocker hardware, so it probably won't be implemented.

  2. Re:Could it be something else? on Cell Phone Use Tied To Changes In Brain Activity · · Score: 1

    Maybe it was actually caused by the phones being muted? Since the you're so used to hearing something when a phone is placed against your ear, and you often spend a moderate effort trying to separate the sound from the phone from background noise, maybe the lack of any sound at all made their brains try extra hard to listen for the expected sound.

    A nice control would be some non-cellphone device that looked and acted like a phone, could be either muted or not, but only played a pre-recorded message and didn't produce any EM radiation.

  3. Not completely dead. on Ubisoft's Draconian DRM Patched? · · Score: 1

    I just looked into this a bit more, and if what I understand is correct:

    These games do NOT require you to be always-on anymore
    Splinter Cell: Conviction
    Silent Hunter 5
    Assassin's Creed 2

    These games STILL requires you to be always-on
    The Settlers 7
    Prince of Persia 2010
    Hawx 2
    Probably a few others

    As an aside, the the way they "fixed" the always-on issue is a bit interesting - instead of issuing new patches for the various games, they now download a separate program for each game that does what Ubisoft's servers used to do.

  4. Re:Leaking on Witcher 2 Torrents Could Net You a Fine · · Score: 1

    You don't need to seed a single byte to get the IPs of everyone on a torrent. Just ask the tracker/DHT network, and it willingly gives away all info about seeders/peers. This is by design, as torrents were never intended to be used for illegal means.

  5. Re:Angry? on Why Designers Hate Crowdsourcing · · Score: 1

    As an example of thorough work done by a real design agency, here is a 90-page PDF style guide from the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. (Not in English, but the images should speak for themselves.)

    You won't get anything comparable for $250 on 99designs.

  6. Re:Answer to brute force attacks on OAuth, OpenID Password Crack Could Affect Millions · · Score: 1

    Have timing measurements ever been exploited online in practice? I would assume that over the internet, any difference in timing would get drowned out in the timing noise of a dozen routers, switches, heck, even possibly cable quality - making any reliable measurement impossible.

  7. Re:Default SQL username and password in HMI on Malware Targets Shortcut Flaw In Windows, SCADA · · Score: 1

    Server=.\WinCC;uid=WinCCConnect;pwd=2WSXcder (+1 for what appears to be a reasonably random looking password

    Only random looking. Glance down at your keyboard as you type in that password.

  8. Re:eff them on Ubisoft DRM Problems Remain Unsolved · · Score: 1

    If you're talking about VAC-banning then you're just factually incorrect. If not then I'd be interested to know of an example, because I've never heard of somebody's entire Steam account being banned. Phished, perhaps, but not banned.

    Google "disabled Steam account". They ban people for various things, mostly related to billing issues. If you want to experience it yourself, try purchasing something with a credit card, then dispute the charge. Poof, no more account.

  9. Not even a software problem on Do Car Safety Problems Come From Outer Space? · · Score: 1

    They might have a slight point if the stuck accelerator problem actually was caused a software problem.

    But since the problem has been shown to be a floor mat, or, in some other cases, a faulty mechanical design, what does this article have to do with anything?

  10. Just turn off the pagefile.

    Windows can't page when it doesn't have a pagefile. Problem solved. At least it works for me.

  11. Had a similar problem with XP on 86% of Windows 7 PCs Maxing Out Memory · · Score: 1

    I haven't tested Windows 7 yet, but I was always annoyed that XP seemed quite fond of prioritizing disk cache over background applications. Every time after I had been playing a game, my web browser/email client would be slow as molasses because it was completely swapped out and it would take minutes before it went back to normal speed. So I did the one thing that a lot of people think is some kind of blasphemy.

    I turned off swap.

    And never looked back. I don't have to worry about disk trashing when changing between programs anymore, the whole system feels faster and I've never run out of memory, despite only having 3GB. Something was definitely flawed in the XP memory management.

  12. Re:I just wonder on $860 Million In Fines Handed Out For LCD Price-Fixing · · Score: 1

    There are nearly as many computers in the real world using SDRAM and DDR SDRAM as there are using computers using DDR2 or DDR3.

    They are also owned by people/companies that would rather buy a new system instead of adding more RAM.

  13. Re:The DMCA does *not* make the case go away on Google and Microsoft Sued By Mini Music Label · · Score: 0

    Yes, it's Google's problem that you don't know how to use robots.txt.

  14. Re: features being revoked on Xbox Live Class Action Being Investigated · · Score: 1

    Bull. Shit.

    My Xbox hasn't been online in months and I have both installed and played games from the drive while it was offline. Try again.

  15. Re:Nvidia 8800GT PS3 on US Government Using PS3s To Break Encryption · · Score: 1

    Why would you want the double-precision version? Crypto is all about integer math.

  16. Re:Nvidia 8800GT PS3 on US Government Using PS3s To Break Encryption · · Score: 1

    I modified code from this SHA1 cracker. Good enough evidence?

  17. Nvidia 8800GT PS3 on US Government Using PS3s To Break Encryption · · Score: 1

    My 8800GT gets about 100 million passwords per second when cracking MD5 and SHA1 hashes. I thought the CELL was supposed to make the PS3 faster?

  18. Re:Is this a derivative work? on Wikipedia In Your Pocket, $99 · · Score: 1

    All the things you specified are software based, and as others have already said, you can get the source of that right now.

  19. Re:Paper summary on Researchers Outline Targeted Content Poisoning For P2P Data · · Score: 1

    Bittorrent has data integrity checks for every chunk

    So does edonkey. These people have no clue what they're talking about.

  20. Brass Eye did it first on Tennesee Man Charged In "Virtual Pornography" Case · · Score: 1
  21. Re:Twists in the fiber optic cable on Research Vehicle Reaches the Bottom of the Ocean · · Score: 1

    I worked on an ROV simulation back in the 90's and we needed to keep track of how many times the ROV turned around because twists accumulate in the cable. At some point you may have to sit in place and spin for a bit to undo the twists. Terrible things happen when the tether gets too twisted.

    Why aren't you doing the un-spinning at the top of the cable? Seems like it would be better than spinning around at the bottom.

  22. Re:How can this be? sufixication on Windows 7 Users Warned Over Filename Security Risk · · Score: 1

    The good thing about standards is that there are soo many to pick from!

    Seriously, "file" works by checking magic bytes, that is correct. What is also correct is that there are a thousand different ways these magic bytes are stored and found. Some formats, like MP3, don't even have reliable magic bytes.

  23. Re:Needed? on Archive Team Is Busy Saving Geocities · · Score: 1

    archive.org is not Archive Team.

  24. Re:Good lord let it go on Archive Team Is Busy Saving Geocities · · Score: 1

    Sure we would know a lot more about them but we would have so much material we would never be able to sift through it and preserving it all would probably consume damn near all our resources. Further more we would probably struggle to determine what the people of the time found important and what drove them.

    If there only was some kind of program that could sift through billions of documents and automatically index them and rank them according to relative importance. Some kind of searcher. Too bad nothing like that exist.

  25. Fuck these guys. on Grad Student Project Uses Wikis To Stash Data, Miffs Admins · · Score: 3, Informative

    Fuck these guys.

    They didn't hit just abandoned wikis. In fact, when they first started doing this back in January, they didn't leave any information about what they were doing, and they used proxy servers to hide where they came from.

    Evidence, my wiki was hit and I had no clue what was going on.