Deadline Hollywood Daily is stating that the strike is not over and that while there is a tensive agreement worked out they are only now starting to draft it in writing and agree to the wording, so the strike is not over until everything is completely hashed out in writing and signed by both sides. They are also stating that Eisner is the only one saying this, and further speculated that he may be saying this to pump Disney stock.
It's not just bit-torrent... Comcast is targeting, also secure transport-- using encrypted channels (such as https to gmail, ssh to my home pc, secure IM, etc).
This makes me ask the question-- should Google do anything in response to this announcement? The first thing I thought of-- what if Google offered to buy Microsoft-- surely Google could run it far better than they can. And, just think of what they might release for a Post Visa OS...
For example: Hyannis airport (HYA), Nantucket Airport (AWK), Martha's Vineyard's Airport (MYA) flying to these airports there is no screening... along with Providence (PVD) Airport with regards to flying to or from those listed destinations.
You still can if you are careful where you travel to and from, since the TSA does not screen for all airports in the country. There are a lot of minor airports or airport direct flights that do not require screening at all.
Hollywood was created by thief's, so what do you expect? They want to have their cake and eat it too.From The Pirates Dilemma
"Some of America's greatest innovators were thought of as pirates. When Thomas Edison invented the phonographic record player, musicians branded him a pirate out to steal their work and destroy the live music business, until a system was established so everyone could be paid royalties, which we today call the record industry. Edison, in turn, went on to invent filmmaking, and demanded a licensing fee from those making movies with his technology. This caused a band of filmmaking pirates, including a man named William, to flee New York for the then still wild West, where they thrived, unlicensed, until Edison's patents expired. These pirates continue to operate there, albeit legally now, in the town they founded: Hollywood. William's last name? Fox."
That makes sense... I think I knew that on some level, I was just way too tired last night to think as clearly normally would.
I have noticed the following while using Comcast's service: As I said before, encrypted torrent traffic seems to work fine, but once things start seeding, all traffic that is not encrypted gets throttled, which includes port 80 packets... this I find very annoying, but I bet if a person sets up a encrypted tunnel outside of Comcast's network, then one can overt this tactic.
I wonder if there were large cash payments for studios to switch... wasn't it Dreamworks that was payed several hundred million dollars this past summer to jump formats for a set period of time?
I am house sitting using a Comcast connection and the only seeding I can do is if it is encrypted. Somewhat related, I have Verizon DSL at home and I have noticed a increased of forged reset packets while on bit-torrent over the last few months; though I think Azureus ignores most of them. I want to know-- why aren't other ISP's getting reports on their similar habits?
Alright, then how about burning a disc to disc copy, where by the copy is DRM free and acts as a backup copy, which is allowed under the law; furthermore, then rip the backup copy, and, thus, getting around the DMCA?
Do you ever suggest an alternative Office product that is free, such as Open Office or and online office suite? The last place I worked, they went from using pirated copies of MS Office across the company, then shifted to using Google Apps as the only office product (except for a handful of people in the company). Fear of getting sued and finding better ways to share information on all their existing hardware was the motivation.
Love your mode of testing. But anyways...have they fixed the audio influences network load bug yet? Not that I use DRM music, but curious to see if they saw that as something that should to be fixed.
Your first round of decrypted messages are worthless meat eating mammal, for the the party of interest encrypted the messages twice-- once before going into Hushmail and again when Hushmail scrambled it before sending.
Hrm... It would be interesting if the cost of harvesting it outweighted the investment to build the infostructure to bring it back to our planet.
Deadline Hollywood Daily is stating that the strike is not over and that while there is a tensive agreement worked out they are only now starting to draft it in writing and agree to the wording, so the strike is not over until everything is completely hashed out in writing and signed by both sides. They are also stating that Eisner is the only one saying this, and further speculated that he may be saying this to pump Disney stock.
It's not just bit-torrent... Comcast is targeting, also secure transport-- using encrypted channels (such as https to gmail, ssh to my home pc, secure IM, etc).
This makes me ask the question-- should Google do anything in response to this announcement? The first thing I thought of-- what if Google offered to buy Microsoft-- surely Google could run it far better than they can. And, just think of what they might release for a Post Visa OS...
For example: Hyannis airport (HYA), Nantucket Airport (AWK), Martha's Vineyard's Airport (MYA) flying to these airports there is no screening... along with Providence (PVD) Airport with regards to flying to or from those listed destinations.
Makes me wonder, where's the emperors cloths?
You still can if you are careful where you travel to and from, since the TSA does not screen for all airports in the country. There are a lot of minor airports or airport direct flights that do not require screening at all.
What would happen if Google bought Microsoft?
It's not just P2P traffic that is being hit with the throttling. They are throttling IPSec, HTTPS, SCP, SSH, SFTP, FTP, among many other protocols.
That does not surprise me, since they throttle my https traffic with gmail.
10K sounds like a lot for healthcare costs, but it really is not. 1 ambulance ride can cost at least that much.
Right... my bad for not correcting the quote.
That makes sense... I think I knew that on some level, I was just way too tired last night to think as clearly normally would.
I have noticed the following while using Comcast's service: As I said before, encrypted torrent traffic seems to work fine, but once things start seeding, all traffic that is not encrypted gets throttled, which includes port 80 packets... this I find very annoying, but I bet if a person sets up a encrypted tunnel outside of Comcast's network, then one can overt this tactic.
I wonder if there were large cash payments for studios to switch... wasn't it Dreamworks that was payed several hundred million dollars this past summer to jump formats for a set period of time?
I am house sitting using a Comcast connection and the only seeding I can do is if it is encrypted. Somewhat related, I have Verizon DSL at home and I have noticed a increased of forged reset packets while on bit-torrent over the last few months; though I think Azureus ignores most of them. I want to know-- why aren't other ISP's getting reports on their similar habits?
That's true. Also the main point of the next releasing containing PulseAudio is mute, since Ubuntu plans to include it in their next release also.
Alright, then how about burning a disc to disc copy, where by the copy is DRM free and acts as a backup copy, which is allowed under the law; furthermore, then rip the backup copy, and, thus, getting around the DMCA?
Or just had some fun with the word sage like so: grep '.*s.*a.*g.*e' /var/lib/words
Yes, they were over priced in their brick stores, but the reasonable priced items CompUSA only sold through their website.
Do you ever suggest an alternative Office product that is free, such as Open Office or and online office suite?
The last place I worked, they went from using pirated copies of MS Office across the company, then shifted to using Google Apps as the only office product (except for a handful of people in the company). Fear of getting sued and finding better ways to share information on all their existing hardware was the motivation.
Also, yee, not forget our dearest Goddess of The Principle of Discordia.
I agree, unless it's on a Ms Windows box, in which case, I choose ^W.
Love your mode of testing. But anyways...have they fixed the audio influences network load bug yet? Not that I use DRM music, but curious to see if they saw that as something that should to be fixed.
Your first round of decrypted messages are worthless meat eating mammal, for the the party of interest encrypted the messages twice-- once before going into Hushmail and again when Hushmail scrambled it before sending.