In my dealings with TD Ameritrade, and an online brokerage starting with the letter Z (guess which one I signed an (weak) NDA with and am now regretting), and then dealing with the SEC and the FBI to clean up what I found, I can tell you this:
Businesses with insecure workstations are not necessarily the reason why banks are getting broken it to.
Banks are _careless_ with their online security, leaving things like token validation and referrer logging well beyond their vocabulary. After my findings, contact with the agencies shows that they prioritize things like DDOS (which affects businesses) higher than "loss" of information (which affects customers.)
I get 99.999% spam on my wiki. But I still want people to be able to contribute. Running a small wiki has been impossible for me even will all these spam extensions.
Google Voice is the game changer. And if they implement VOIP to originate and terminate calls without POTS, this will be the real iphone. (I'm talking about the Linksys iphone, no the iPhone.) This would completely dominate the current voice/sms offerings available today. Apple (ATT) would never allow this.
You buy the phone and a data contract, all calls go through Google VOIP. Oh, and international calls are 2c/min. SMS is free.
The phone number and service is the worst part of your phone.
LISA can be thought of as a giant Michelson interferometer in space. The spacecraft separation sets the range of GW frequencies LISA can observe (from 0.03 milliHertz to above 0.1 Hertz).
>> So when the US Federal Reserve lends[1] its friends X trillion US dollars ( and they only need to pay back 'later' when convenient), it's actually a way of taxing everyone else.
This is 180 degrees away from the correct situation. With benefit of doubt, a presume a typo.
The US benefits when it borrows money, and then returns diminished-value money.
Our solution is to hold precious metals rather than just a FPOP.
>> They arrived at 7 for the version number in this way: Windows 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 lines are self-explanatory. The NT4 and Windows 95/98/ME family were all part of the 4.x version of Windows. Win2000 and XP were 5.x, so naturally Vista was 6.0. That leaves us at 7 for the new Windows.
>> Except, there are no patent trolls in this case. i4i ships and sells an actual product, the patented code for which Microsoft actually stole after working with them.
Unless your name is Johnny Tables, how do you execute a SQL injection on a credit card processing system?
Maybe the blame should be placed on the system that gave the attacker visibility into the transaction processing database, rather than a sandboxed (rather, firewalled) access to the data needed to complete his specific transaction.
you pay one cent for the privilege of Y! adding a their cryptographic signature to your message. filters everywhere learn that the aforementioned mail is less likely to be spam.
>> I don't know the tech details of ChromeOS yet, but I get the impression it's mostly if not entirely net-based. I think that's going to leave Microsoft with a fairly comfortable marketshare even if it takes off because, to some extent, many people want *their* files and *their* processing to be solely under *their* control. There's something to be said for having your own house with your own yard and fence versus living in an apartment building with millions of other people. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Encryption.
Google wont support it, but if cloudbooks are cheap and you can do modest encryption on the client, this could be a solution for many people.
>> Which is why we should deprecate them and turn toward country level TLD's. Let individual countries have control over what domains are allowable. If a company, say Google, has a server in the US, their.com name would end up as google.com.us, if they have a server in Germany, it would be google.com.de. A government web site in the US would be congress.gov.us or in Germany, bundestag.gov.de.
* States are political entities, not just countries... do they get TLD's? * Countries change often * What country is the EU or RedCross in?
it's secure, except for in china where they use the NSAKEY
IPV4 addresses will be exhausted at a time according to the following formula:
Wiggabu + 18 months
where Wiggabu represents the time you are currently reading this equation.
In my dealings with TD Ameritrade, and an online brokerage starting with the letter Z (guess which one I signed an (weak) NDA with and am now regretting), and then dealing with the SEC and the FBI to clean up what I found, I can tell you this:
Businesses with insecure workstations are not necessarily the reason why banks are getting broken it to.
Banks are _careless_ with their online security, leaving things like token validation and referrer logging well beyond their vocabulary. After my findings, contact with the agencies shows that they prioritize things like DDOS (which affects businesses) higher than "loss" of information (which affects customers.)
Can I do this on my wiki?
I get 99.999% spam on my wiki. But I still want people to be able to contribute. Running a small wiki has been impossible for me even will all these spam extensions.
Google Voice is the game changer. And if they implement VOIP to originate and terminate calls without POTS, this will be the real iphone. (I'm talking about the Linksys iphone, no the iPhone.) This would completely dominate the current voice/sms offerings available today. Apple (ATT) would never allow this.
You buy the phone and a data contract, all calls go through Google VOIP. Oh, and international calls are 2c/min. SMS is free.
The phone number and service is the worst part of your phone.
>> The GGF deal at the moment is dead in the water. And thank god for that. Apparently the GGF offered to buy TPB with money they don't have lol.
If TPB accepted the deal, then we support it. The deal fell through, so we are upset.
Online banking security in the face of malware is an argument for TC. Which Stallman calls Treacherous Computing.
Although, if you controlled the root keys, this would be a step in the right direction.
If you talk to a string theorist, it feels like you are talking to a religious person.
Please see the LISA mission:
http://lisa.nasa.gov/
LISA can be thought of as a giant Michelson interferometer in space. The spacecraft separation sets the range of GW frequencies LISA can observe (from 0.03 milliHertz to above 0.1 Hertz).
>> So when the US Federal Reserve lends[1] its friends X trillion US dollars ( and they only need to pay back 'later' when convenient), it's actually a way of taxing everyone else.
This is 180 degrees away from the correct situation. With benefit of doubt, a presume a typo.
The US benefits when it borrows money, and then returns diminished-value money.
Our solution is to hold precious metals rather than just a FPOP.
It's a good thing I browse at +5 Troll and can see abuses of the moderation system such as this.
I am reading this as insightful rather than sarcastic due to two party systems.
Don't get upset. If paypal had screwed you, just buy anything, pay CC and chargeback.
Chargebacks are extremely effective against paypal.
Anyone who funds with a bank account... well... yeah... you're stupid
>> They arrived at 7 for the version number in this way: Windows 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0 lines are self-explanatory. The NT4 and Windows 95/98/ME family were all part of the 4.x version of Windows. Win2000 and XP were 5.x, so naturally Vista was 6.0. That leaves us at 7 for the new Windows.
Except that Vista was -2.1
>> Except, there are no patent trolls in this case. i4i ships and sells an actual product, the patented code for which Microsoft actually stole after working with them.
The code, or the algorithm?
Unless your name is Johnny Tables, how do you execute a SQL injection on a credit card processing system?
Maybe the blame should be placed on the system that gave the attacker visibility into the transaction processing database, rather than a sandboxed (rather, firewalled) access to the data needed to complete his specific transaction.
and archive.org is designed to be a nonprofit
you pay one cent for the privilege of Y! adding a their cryptographic signature to your message. filters everywhere learn that the aforementioned mail is less likely to be spam.
sounds like a worthy experiment to me.
Good luck with that EAL7 certification.
Oh, and Integrity is only EAL6+
http://www.ghs.com/products/rtos/integrity.html
And they can't outsource that job to China!
>> Defense Department policy states that people in financial trouble may be tempted to sell military secrets to escape debt.
>> The city tax bill went unpaid when Lynch and his wife chose to pay their daughter's tuition instead.
So... in this case they did the right thing: identify an employee who could be compromised, and terminate him.
I saw this post earlier and did quick math to show how much power this really is:
http://fulldecent.blogspot.com/2009/08/some-quick-math-on-gms-new-volt.html
i do NOT have adsense on my blog
>> I swear, my pacemaker started downloading kitty porn! It wasn't me!
While phonetically similar, I doubt that has been the subject of recent prosecution.
>> I don't know the tech details of ChromeOS yet, but I get the impression it's mostly if not entirely net-based. I think that's going to leave Microsoft with a fairly comfortable marketshare even if it takes off because, to some extent, many people want *their* files and *their* processing to be solely under *their* control. There's something to be said for having your own house with your own yard and fence versus living in an apartment building with millions of other people. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Encryption.
Google wont support it, but if cloudbooks are cheap and you can do modest encryption on the client, this could be a solution for many people.
>> Which is why we should deprecate them and turn toward country level TLD's. Let individual countries have control over what domains are allowable. If a company, say Google, has a server in the US, their .com name would end up as google.com.us, if they have a server in Germany, it would be google.com.de. A government web site in the US would be congress.gov.us or in Germany, bundestag.gov.de.
* States are political entities, not just countries... do they get TLD's?
* Countries change often
* What country is the EU or RedCross in?