www.somecompany.com CNAME host.hostingcompany.com
www.anothercompany.com CNAME host.hostingcompany.com
then both webservers could use a certificate for host.hostingcompany.com
Except that the browser will validate the server certificate, which embedded within is the name host.hostingcompany.com and warn the user that the site they have connected to (www.somecompany.com or www.anothercompany.com) does not match the certificate contents.
It seems to be a pretty simply strategy - right now Apache running on Intel is the most popular web server platform on the Internet. Watch for lots of Linux drivers for the IBM low to mid-range servers...
Sure there is a solution... just don't send the data to the client until its required. Instead of the server constantly sending the location of the players back to the client and trusting the client to only use that data when appropriate, have the server only send back co-ordinates of the player if they are in view. Once they are out of view the server stops sending the location, ala no cheating..
Your SSN/SIN numbers are owned by the government, your telephone number is owned by the telephone companies, your drivers license by the DMV, your address by the city, your name is probably pretty public domain and your birthdate is definitely not yours alone. Even your job history is likely owned by your employers and criminal records by the police. Shopping patterns by the discount card holders and/or credit card companies, and your email address to your ISP.
The only thing that is yours, and only because there is government legislation stating so, is your healthcare information.
They go so far as to say that the shared memory may include RAM, or hard disk.... soooo, any file on your hard disk is essentially in shared memory. Don't go accessing any files on your hard drive - better retype them all to be safe.:-)
I can't believe this made it here, the date on the web page referenced is from 1997 itself. For those that care, "Americian Computer Company", aka ACC, is run by a single individual named Jack Shulman. There was a story about him on page 10 of Info Systems Executive (a good article for those that get the magazine) listing him as a fraud, and talking about his claims against the US Air Force, Lucent, IBM, AT&T and Bell Labs about stealing the alien technology and hiding the facts about what "really" happened in 1947 in Roswell. He also claims that his company was founded in 1970 but it was really incorporated in 1995 in Delaware.
He also sells PC's from his home page, if you want one you might also be interested in a bridge I'm looking to unload...:-)
www.somecompany.com CNAME host.hostingcompany.com
www.anothercompany.com CNAME host.hostingcompany.com
then both webservers could use a certificate for host.hostingcompany.com
Except that the browser will validate the server certificate, which embedded within is the name host.hostingcompany.com and warn the user that the site they have connected to (www.somecompany.com or www.anothercompany.com) does not match the certificate contents.
It seems to be a pretty simply strategy - right now Apache running on Intel is the most popular web server platform on the Internet. Watch for lots of Linux drivers for the IBM low to mid-range servers...
Sure there is a solution... just don't send the data to the client until its required. Instead of the server constantly sending the location of the players back to the client and trusting the client to only use that data when appropriate, have the server only send back co-ordinates of the player if they are in view. Once they are out of view the server stops sending the location, ala no cheating..
Browsers will only present a cookie to the same site that gave it to you.
IANAL, but I'd have to agree.
Your SSN/SIN numbers are owned by the government, your telephone number is owned by the telephone companies, your drivers license by the DMV, your address by the city, your name is probably pretty public domain and your birthdate is definitely not yours alone. Even your job history is likely owned by your employers and criminal records by the police. Shopping patterns by the discount card holders and/or credit card companies, and your email address to your ISP.
The only thing that is yours, and only because there is government legislation stating so, is your healthcare information.
They go so far as to say that the shared memory may include RAM, or hard disk.... soooo, any file on your hard disk is essentially in shared memory. Don't go accessing any files on your hard drive - better retype them all to be safe. :-)
Forgot to mention the month of the article, it was on page 10 of the July 1998 issue of Info Systems Executive.
I can't believe this made it here, the date on the web page referenced is from 1997 itself. For those that care, "Americian Computer Company", aka ACC, is run by a single individual named Jack Shulman. There was a story about him on page 10 of Info Systems Executive (a good article for those that get the magazine) listing him as a fraud, and talking about his claims against the US Air Force, Lucent, IBM, AT&T and Bell Labs about stealing the alien technology and hiding the facts about what "really" happened in 1947 in Roswell. He also claims that his company was founded in 1970 but it was really incorporated in 1995 in Delaware.
:-)
He also sells PC's from his home page, if you want one you might also be interested in a bridge I'm looking to unload...