Why do it to intro classes. All the assignments are so short that most programs will be alike. Why not do it only on longer and more drawn out assignments.
>you'll never have to worry about the FBI hacking
did you look at the URL you typed in nsa.GOV it's a US government website. I would never ever trust the US government with anything, not even Green Jello.
What a way for the government to get feedback on it's top project. Release little tidbits of information, and then let people spill their beans about how they can find a way around their spy software. No doubt that the people working on the project are geeks and might actually read Slashdot. It only has hundreds of thousands of users. There are a bunch of users who says that _they_ can "beat the system" and they detail the why and how of it. Way to help the US government!
The stdio.h inside less than and greater than symbols got stripted.
: (
-TC
Why do it to intro classes. All the assignments are so short that most programs will be alike. Why not do it only on longer and more drawn out assignments.
I bet this program would bring up some flags:
#include
int main() {
printf("Hello World\n");
return 0;
}
-TC
More time to perfect Green Jello!
>you'll never have to worry about the FBI hacking
did you look at the URL you typed in nsa.GOV it's a US government website. I would never ever trust the US government with anything, not even Green Jello.
What a way for the government to get feedback on it's top project. Release little tidbits of information, and then let people spill their beans about how they can find a way around their spy software. No doubt that the people working on the project are geeks and might actually read Slashdot. It only has hundreds of thousands of users. There are a bunch of users who says that _they_ can "beat the system" and they detail the why and how of it. Way to help the US government!