I have found out that by finding the admin's email address and real name, then searching their site with google, many times you can find sensitive tidbits (especially if you search a University website.)
Sorry, no link. I just saw on CNN, a big rig truck modified to become a slow-moving boat. It made it to about 20 miles off the coast before the passengers were retrieved and returned to Cuba. I wish they would have made it to the USA. America needs more ingeniously creative people.
I'm an undergraduate student going towards a CS. After I graduate I plan to get a master's from an educational institution reccomended by the NSA. Keep in mind that some schools on this list have better programs than others. Georgia Tech has a highly technical program while Carnegie Mellon has a great organizational program. Both schools deal with all topics, just to different degrees. I have heard the argument that experience is better than education. In my opinion, both are important. If you are looking for a less formal learning experience, you could check out DEFCON, which is an annual conference for hackers. There are also other more formal conferences
which costs lots more. (ApacheCon, DallasCon etc.) If you are looking for a thorough documentation, you could check the Open Source Security Testing Methodology Manual
. Network and other computer security topics are extremely important and very important and interresting.
I'm an undergraduate student going towards a CS. After I graduate I plan to get a master's from an educational institution reccomended by the NSA. Keep in mind that some schools on this list have better programs than others. Georgia Tech has a highly technical program while Carnegie Mellon has a great organizational program. Both schools deal with all topics, just to different degrees. I have heard the argument that experience is better than education. In my opinion, both are important. If you are looking for a less formal learning experience, you could check out DEFCON, which is an annual conference for hackers. There are also other more formal conferences
which costs lots more. (ApacheCon, DallasCon etc.) If you are looking for a thorough documentation, you could check the Open Source Security Testing Methodology Manual
. Network and other computer security topics are extremely important and very important and interresting.
I lived in New Brunswick, Canada for about 8 months. In one apartment I was in, we had a dehumidifier right by the bathroom. In such a humid climate, humidity can cause mold to form quicker. (this was also evidenced by bread in the cupboard going moldy quickly in cupboards) I'm not sure if it decreased the tempetature, but it did decrease mold and humidity. If you live in a humid climate, dehumidifiers can help maintain your dwelling place.
blog sites?
geocities
Tripod
words like "blog" "weblog", "last summer I went on vacation to" etc
The above mentioned sites can have very useful information. I whole heartedly agree about news having lowsy sources (see Joey Skaggs' website
Even if you use search criteria, what's to prevent some doehead from getting his own domain name? (It's only about $8 from a good name registry service)
Personally, I think it may be useful to have a blogging search, but it will be near impossible to remove many blogs besides the ones listed on major websites.
Read the previous article. It mentions that it is difficult and time consuming to detect hosts using packet #s. The easiest way to change this is to randomize packet #s and change TTLs. Think of it this way, TCP/IP has been around a long time. If it were this simple to check to see if someone was behind a NAT why hasn't anyone done it yet?
The only problem is that many of the stocks that lost are no more. We don't need another round of companies which have heavily inflated stock prices without a sliver of a chance of turning profits. Those at the top will get rich and many more will get poor. Say no to another.com era.
When I went to high school, we still watched that propoganda TV. It was a "news" program with commercials that lasted 15 minutes. It was aired once per day. The deal was kids watch the advertisements and in return the school gets one free TV and VCR per room. It's a decent deal for the school, but the news program really sucked. The reporters had huge hand motions and explained things at a low level. It was so obnoxious that they treated high school and junior high kids as being so incoherent and mindlesss that they don't understand news unlesss you jumped around and talked as if they were third graders.
Most linux desktop, or as I would say, home or laptop users who use linux are already somewhat proficient with computers. (i.e. CS, comp/electric engineers) Truly, old hats are less likely to change. The up and coming generation is the most likely to use linux. At BYU's installfest this year, " We installed Linux for 57 people, some on multiple computers. This was by far our most successful InstallFest. Because of the huge turnout, we blew three breakers. We even had to move all the laptop users out into the hall to be on a different power circuit. " club site
I'm fairly certain we at least doubled installations since the last installfest.
The music division of Sony has sued the consumer electronics division multiple times. The CE division is no longer allowed to make MP3 devices (like an iPod). I think this is a sham. NewScientist never has anything any good. If they do, I never trust it because it's never right. When will/. ever learn.
Im surprised no one has mentioned earthships. I heard about them about a year ago. Imagine a house built partly into the ground that used solar panels to regulate temperature more efficiently. Alternatively you could have your house built out of dirt cheap materials. (Used Tires) Economically it is inexpensive, efficient and I believe durable. Well, the website is http://www.earthship.org
I started school at BYU this semester. I'm going into CS. The first required class had a horrifying syllabus. We were to learn about C, basic electronics, and assembly language built for a theoretical computer. I was disgusted that we would learn just about NOTHING which would be practical. I transferred out of there so fast. Now, I just hope I can get exempted from that class or take a C++, Java, or X86 assmebly course instead.
Real women? Where have you found someone who doesn't want a diamond? I'd say you're out of the loop. Stop reading/. and go on a date. I don't know ANY woman who wouldn't want a diamond.
What's this talk about a school that has alumnus donating big money to boycott Microsoft? I think this is a fake submission. I can't think of any good reason why anyone would donate such large sums of cash to make sure a school boycotts Microsoft. I mean really, this is not even an issue. There clearly is no need to boycott Microsoft from a school's point of view. Furthermore, what kind of 7000 student school would have students who understood how to use Linux and/or macs. And in case you were wondering, it's bologna sandwich or Brittney Spears.
despite what you may think, these people likely aren't security professionals. They are probably your regular users, or grandmas that don't even know they have file sharing enabled.
the truth is that this display won't look real. It will look like a computer. Watching real fish you can perceive the depth and you can move and see another side of the fish. I admit this will look pretty cool, but it will be obvious that it's not real.
This idea wouldn't work because people would not implement it. It would take time to set up mirrors in a DNS and then to update them. If you are talking about FTP, some downloaders already search for and accept multiple sites. They also check for proximity of downloads.
If you are talking about websites like the slashdot effect, good luck on getting anyone to implement and maintain the table. A viable option for slashdot effect would be to mirror it in your journal. Or you could use kazaa.
My former school, UVSC uses social security numbers, firstname and lastname combinations for user IDs. They then use birthdays for passwords. Talk about insecure. I even saw a teacher who typed his password as "password" (He was in CS) Yea, scared me too.
Most "crackers" don't even look at the source code. Truly, how many people have even FOUND why sendmail has a buffer overflow. The rough idea was not released, but not the method.
Yet on the contrary, bugs or backdoors exist whether or not the app is open sourced. What good will it do to write a back door in a closed source environment? If you are intent on breaking the software, reverse engineering assembly language is an option.
I found a paper that relates to your question. It analyzes p2p traffic which accounts for a significant portion of web traffic. It shows that although music files are the most popular downloads, they account for a significantly small amount downloaded. Still images also count for nothing. The bulk of the downloads are popular movies and applications/games.
Its' finding conclude that by having a 200 GB cache for storing popular downloads, it is plausible for an ISP to achieve a 67% decrease in P2P traffic and a 50% thoroughput bandwidth download decrease. My conclusion is that most bandwidth from pr0n is in the form of movies and some video games. This survey did not address what was pr0n, but it is a good starting point as to where all that bandwidth is going. The website in question is located here
I'd say this is a good starting point for analyzing traffic and curtailing or perhaps more preferably eliminating users who abuse bandwidth usage.
It's rediculous. They have either pointless stories or stories that don't matter worth beans. Many times both.
i.e. The secret of hiccups!
I have absolutely no idea why/. makes any reference to this pathetic wannabe science magazine.
could this be related to depression?
on
Soundless Music?
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
Scientists have begun analysing the responses of 250 people who took part in the study into the effects of infrasound, carried out at Liverpool's Metropolitan Cathedral last September.
They showed the audience's emotions intensified as the inaudible sound vibrations, too low for the human ear to perceive, were blasted out during a 50-minute piano recital.
This sounds an awful lot like depression, the intensified emotions that is. I know this is a little early to tell, but could these experiments help us understand depression a bit more?
I have googled for a coldFusion example program (which just so happened to be vulnerable). I found many site that were vulnerable.
I have found out that by finding the admin's email address and real name, then searching their site with google, many times you can find sensitive tidbits (especially if you search a University website.)
Sorry, no link. I just saw on CNN, a big rig truck modified to become a slow-moving boat. It made it to about 20 miles off the coast before the passengers were retrieved and returned to Cuba. I wish they would have made it to the USA. America needs more ingeniously creative people.
I'm an undergraduate student going towards a CS. After I graduate I plan to get a master's from an educational institution reccomended by the NSA. Keep in mind that some schools on this list have better programs than others. Georgia Tech has a highly technical program while Carnegie Mellon has a great organizational program. Both schools deal with all topics, just to different degrees. I have heard the argument that experience is better than education. In my opinion, both are important.
If you are looking for a less formal learning experience, you could check out DEFCON, which is an annual conference for hackers. There are also other more formal conferences which costs lots more. (ApacheCon, DallasCon etc.)
If you are looking for a thorough documentation, you could check the Open Source Security Testing Methodology Manual . Network and other computer security topics are extremely important and very important and interresting.
I'm an undergraduate student going towards a CS. After I graduate I plan to get a master's from an educational institution reccomended by the NSA. Keep in mind that some schools on this list have better programs than others. Georgia Tech has a highly technical program while Carnegie Mellon has a great organizational program. Both schools deal with all topics, just to different degrees. I have heard the argument that experience is better than education. In my opinion, both are important.
If you are looking for a less formal learning experience, you could check out DEFCON, which is an annual conference for hackers. There are also other more formal conferences which costs lots more. (ApacheCon, DallasCon etc.)
If you are looking for a thorough documentation, you could check the Open Source Security Testing Methodology Manual . Network and other computer security topics are extremely important and very important and interresting.
I lived in New Brunswick, Canada for about 8 months. In one apartment I was in, we had a dehumidifier right by the bathroom. In such a humid climate, humidity can cause mold to form quicker. (this was also evidenced by bread in the cupboard going moldy quickly in cupboards) I'm not sure if it decreased the tempetature, but it did decrease mold and humidity. If you live in a humid climate, dehumidifiers can help maintain your dwelling place.
blog sites?
geocities
Tripod
words like "blog" "weblog", "last summer I went on vacation to" etc
The above mentioned sites can have very useful information. I whole heartedly agree about news having lowsy sources (see Joey Skaggs' website
Even if you use search criteria, what's to prevent some doehead from getting his own domain name? (It's only about $8 from a good name registry service)
Personally, I think it may be useful to have a blogging search, but it will be near impossible to remove many blogs besides the ones listed on major websites.
Read the previous article. It mentions that it is difficult and time consuming to detect hosts using packet #s. The easiest way to change this is to randomize packet #s and change TTLs. Think of it this way, TCP/IP has been around a long time. If it were this simple to check to see if someone was behind a NAT why hasn't anyone done it yet?
was a movie where aliens used a video game as a recruitment tool. Concept sounds good, but the movie sucked!
The only problem is that many of the stocks that lost are no more. We don't need another round of companies which have heavily inflated stock prices without a sliver of a chance of turning profits. Those at the top will get rich and many more will get poor. Say no to another .com era.
When I went to high school, we still watched that propoganda TV. It was a "news" program with commercials that lasted 15 minutes. It was aired once per day. The deal was kids watch the advertisements and in return the school gets one free TV and VCR per room. It's a decent deal for the school, but the news program really sucked. The reporters had huge hand motions and explained things at a low level. It was so obnoxious that they treated high school and junior high kids as being so incoherent and mindlesss that they don't understand news unlesss you jumped around and talked as if they were third graders.
Most linux desktop, or as I would say, home or laptop users who use linux are already somewhat proficient with computers. (i.e. CS, comp/electric engineers) Truly, old hats are less likely to change. The up and coming generation is the most likely to use linux. At BYU's installfest this year,
" We installed Linux for 57 people, some on multiple computers. This was by far our most successful InstallFest. Because of the huge turnout, we blew three breakers. We even had to move all the laptop users out into the hall to be on a different power circuit. " club site
I'm fairly certain we at least doubled installations since the last installfest.
The music division of Sony has sued the consumer electronics division multiple times. The CE division is no longer allowed to make MP3 devices (like an iPod). /. ever learn.
I think this is a sham. NewScientist never has anything any good. If they do, I never trust it because it's never right. When will
Im surprised no one has mentioned earthships. I heard about them about a year ago. Imagine a house built partly into the ground that used solar panels to regulate temperature more efficiently. Alternatively you could have your house built out of dirt cheap materials. (Used Tires) Economically it is inexpensive, efficient and I believe durable. Well, the website is http://www.earthship.org
void
I started school at BYU this semester. I'm going into CS. The first required class had a horrifying syllabus. We were to learn about C, basic electronics, and assembly language built for a theoretical computer. I was disgusted that we would learn just about NOTHING which would be practical. I transferred out of there so fast. Now, I just hope I can get exempted from that class or take a C++, Java, or X86 assmebly course instead.
void
Real women don't want a diamind:
Real women? Where have you found someone who doesn't want a diamond? I'd say you're out of the loop. Stop reading /. and go on a date. I don't know ANY woman who wouldn't want a diamond.
Void
What's this talk about a school that has alumnus donating big money to boycott Microsoft? I think this is a fake submission. I can't think of any good reason why anyone would donate such large sums of cash to make sure a school boycotts Microsoft. I mean really, this is not even an issue. There clearly is no need to boycott Microsoft from a school's point of view. Furthermore, what kind of 7000 student school would have students who understood how to use Linux and/or macs. And in case you were wondering, it's bologna sandwich or Brittney Spears.
despite what you may think, these people likely aren't security professionals. They are probably your regular users, or grandmas that don't even know they have file sharing enabled.
the truth is that this display won't look real. It will look like a computer. Watching real fish you can perceive the depth and you can move and see another side of the fish. I admit this will look pretty cool, but it will be obvious that it's not real.
This idea wouldn't work because people would not implement it. It would take time to set up mirrors in a DNS and then to update them. If you are talking about FTP, some downloaders already search for and accept multiple sites. They also check for proximity of downloads.
If you are talking about websites like the slashdot effect, good luck on getting anyone to implement and maintain the table. A viable option for slashdot effect would be to mirror it in your journal. Or you could use kazaa.
My former school, UVSC uses social security numbers, firstname and lastname combinations for user IDs. They then use birthdays for passwords. Talk about insecure. I even saw a teacher who typed his password as "password" (He was in CS) Yea, scared me too.
Most "crackers" don't even look at the source code. Truly, how many people have even FOUND why sendmail has a buffer overflow. The rough idea was not released, but not the method.
Yet on the contrary, bugs or backdoors exist whether or not the app is open sourced. What good will it do to write a back door in a closed source environment? If you are intent on breaking the software, reverse engineering assembly language is an option.
I found a paper that relates to your question. It analyzes p2p traffic which accounts for a significant portion of web traffic. It shows that although music files are the most popular downloads, they account for a significantly small amount downloaded. Still images also count for nothing. The bulk of the downloads are popular movies and applications/games. Its' finding conclude that by having a 200 GB cache for storing popular downloads, it is plausible for an ISP to achieve a 67% decrease in P2P traffic and a 50% thoroughput bandwidth download decrease. My conclusion is that most bandwidth from pr0n is in the form of movies and some video games. This survey did not address what was pr0n, but it is a good starting point as to where all that bandwidth is going. The website in question is located here
I'd say this is a good starting point for analyzing traffic and curtailing or perhaps more preferably eliminating users who abuse bandwidth usage.
It's rediculous. They have either pointless stories or stories that don't matter worth beans. Many times both. /. makes any reference to this pathetic wannabe science magazine.
i.e. The secret of hiccups!
I have absolutely no idea why
Scientists have begun analysing the responses of 250 people who took part in the study into the effects of infrasound, carried out at Liverpool's Metropolitan Cathedral last September. They showed the audience's emotions intensified as the inaudible sound vibrations, too low for the human ear to perceive, were blasted out during a 50-minute piano recital.
This sounds an awful lot like depression, the intensified emotions that is. I know this is a little early to tell, but could these experiments help us understand depression a bit more?