Slashdot Mirror


User: Lost+Race

Lost+Race's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
1,306
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 1,306

  1. Re:wealth brings stupidity on TV Programmers Seek the Elusive Dog Market · · Score: -1

    It says we're not all complete bigots. Some of us might really transcend brute nature, red in tooth and claw.

  2. Re:Missed an option. on Microsoft's Cooperation With NSA Either Voluntary, Or Reveals New Legal Tactic · · Score: 1

    Look what happened to the one major telco that refused "voluntary" compliance with the previous administration's warrantless wiretap "requests": relentless investigation, indictment, and conviction of the CEO for the kind of subtle and complicated financial irregularities that no doubt every rich person engages in at some point. The message is clear: Comply "voluntarily" and get a free pass to do business as usual; otherwise we will bring down the full weight of the federal government and crush you.

  3. Re:Enough with the cloud crap already!! on Dropbox Wants To Replace Your Hard Disk · · Score: 1

    With regards to security: Either you trust the input device or you don't. Assuming you trust it, ...

    Why would you trust a public terminal, with unknown hardware behind the screen, running unknown firmware with unknown custom mods? Just because it says "Security Certified by ${TRUSTED_VENDOR}" doesn't mean that's actually true.

    Even if everything behind the screen is legit, there could still be a recording filter in front of the touch screen. This isn't some implausibly far-fetched theoretical concept -- it's a well-known attack commonly used on ATMs.

  4. Re:Enough with the cloud crap already!! on Dropbox Wants To Replace Your Hard Disk · · Score: 1

    I believe the channel between the public terminal and the user is expected to be unencrypted. TLS only works between trusted endpoints, and public terminals are inherently untrustworthy. So unless you're running TLS in your wetware it won't provide any real security. Or I suppose you could access the public terminal through your own private trusted device -- then the terminal is more like an open wifi AP than a tablet, and we're back to everyone carrying their own computer.

    Never type anything into a public terminal that you wouldn't feel comfortable broadcasting to the world.

  5. Re:hmmm on According To YouGov Poll, Snowden Support Declining Among Americans · · Score: 1

    What about paying high ranking members of companies in stock options to avoid taxes?

    Stock options do not avoid taxes. When you exercise them you pay income tax on their value (sell price minus strike price). It's exactly the same as if the company paid a cash bonus.

    Of course, huge stock option grants do give perverse incentives to transient CEOs, but that's a whole other story.

  6. Re:NIMBY on The Aging of Our Nuclear Power Plants Is Not So Graceful · · Score: 1

    the 1.21 GW of power that each person will eventually need.

    You think (or don't) that global is a problem now? Imagine dumping an extra 16 suns worth of power into the atmosphere. Total insolation of Earth's atmosphere is about 500 quadrillion watts. 1.21 GW per person is over 8 quintillion watts at the current population level.

  7. Re:you can start by not being sexist to men on Sexism Still a Problem At E3 · · Score: 1

    Feminists do not want equality. They want power.

  8. Re:Yes but it's to prevent terrorism. on NSA Surveillance May Have Dealt Major Blow To Global Internet Freedom Efforts · · Score: 1

    Back when the NSA was still steadfastly pretending that it couldn't and wouldn't ever spy on American citizens, the wink-and-nod agreement between America and its allies was to spy on each others' citizens and share the results.

  9. Re:Yes but it's to prevent terrorism. on NSA Surveillance May Have Dealt Major Blow To Global Internet Freedom Efforts · · Score: 1

    We all know that airport security and border security failed before 9/11.

    What failed on 9/11 was the traditional policy of airline crew and passengers meekly submitting to the demands of hijackers. By 9/12 that policy was corrected, with no government intervention necessary.

    Letting multiple armed men most of whom had passport and visa violations into airplanes was a colossal intelligence failure.

    Letting "armed" men (with small knives) onto airplanes was not a failure of anything. There is no reasonable way to discriminate at boarding time between homicidal maniacs (an infinitesimal minority) and ordinary people. Trying to make that determination is unreasonable, as is preventing everybody from carrying anything that could possibly be used as a weapon.

    Having a passport or visa violation does not make one a deadly threat. Plenty of harmless people with visa irregularities have managed to squeak past the TSA with no repeat of 9/11. A giant state security apparatus to ensure that everybody has all their papers and documents in order before they can travel ... that hurts far more than it helps.

  10. Re:And they still don't know the initial vector on Backdoor Targeting Apache Servers Spreads To Nginx, Lighttpd · · Score: 1

    Yeah, you could do that, or you could change to a non-standard port. In my ten years of running sshd on a non-standard port on several public servers I've been hit by exactly 0 (zero) probes on that port.

    Obscurity for the security win!

  11. Re:128K MP3 is good enough for me. on Can You Really Hear the Difference Between Lossless, Lossy Audio? · · Score: 1

    Ha ha, no, pressed retail CDs bought from a record store.

  12. 128K MP3 is good enough for me. on Can You Really Hear the Difference Between Lossless, Lossy Audio? · · Score: 1

    When I was much younger and had better hearing and MP3 was a new thing, I ripped my CD collection and encoded everything with whatever the state of the art was back then (bladeenc? mp3enc? this was pre-lame). After a while I started hearing artifacts in MP3-encoded music so I did some A/B testing against the original CD the music was encoded from. Turned out those same artifacts were in the CD.

    MP3 encoding has matured and improved since then, so whatever degradation there may have been, it's less now. I've only ever used 128Kbps stereo encoding, and I've never been able to detect any difference from the CD in any kind of music. This is with fairly high-quality sound cards, amps, and speakers.

    Of course, my high-frequency hearing is pretty much gone now so I sometimes worry that my music collection might sound horrible to anyone with fully functional ears.

  13. Re:Another Ada initiative supporter on SendGrid Fires Employee After Firestorm Over Inappropriate Jokes · · Score: 1

    Making fart jokes and naughty-word puns and such is central to being childish, and being childish is central to being a nerd. I'm not really sure what it's like to be a man.

  14. Re:correction on Botnet Uses Default Passwords To Conduct "Internet Census 2012" · · Score: 2

    99.9% of the time those are (1) someone goofing around, not a real threat, or (2) drive-by from a botnet, never going to hit from that address again. So you're adding complexity and extra points of potential failure to your router with no real benefit.

    Obviously I pulled that "99.9%" figure out of my ass, but seriously, whom do you think you're protecting yourself from with this script?

  15. Fiction on Botnet Uses Default Passwords To Conduct "Internet Census 2012" · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure this story is a very elaborate piece of fiction. That makes way more sense than somebody clearly so smart going to so much trouble to earn themselves a life sentence in prison.

    Maybe last year we could expect someone to do this for real, but not this post-1/11 world.

  16. Re:oh that's right on Galaxy S 4 Dominates In Early Benchmark Testing · · Score: 1

    My iphone 3gs is like that too. I figure it's mainly the flash controller working harder as the flash memory ages. I routinely fill it to 99% before purging the camera roll. After 3 years of heavy use I'll bet the average page erase count is way up there, and there are probably more than a few bad blocks by now.

    Or it could just be three generations of extra firmware bloat bogging down the primitive CPU.

  17. Re:It's time to stop calling these things "phones" on Samsung Unveils the Galaxy S4 · · Score: 1

    Never ask why ....

    Correction: Always ask why.

    The answers are usually pretty interesting.

  18. Re:Does it check to see if he has a gun to head? on Fingerprint Purchasing Technology Ensures Buyer Has a Pulse · · Score: 1

    Useless? I'd rather have a gun to my head than my hand cut off.

  19. How will they power it? on How Facebook Will Power Graph Search · · Score: 5, Funny

    Probably with electricity from the grid, generated from coal, gas, hydroelectric, nuclear, wind, solar, geothermal, etc, as usual. TFA didn't actually mention power sources at all.

  20. Re:We need gas control! on New York Passes Landmark Gun Law · · Score: 2

    You're talking about sociopaths.

    You're probably right that the president and legislators are sociopaths, because the election process does a pretty good job of weeding out non-sociopaths. Nobody with normal human emotions could possibly do what it takes to win a typical modern contested election campaign.

  21. Re:Doomsday clock on The World Remains Five Minutes From Midnight · · Score: 1

    I really don't get it: more than 50% of the US population is against a tax raise for the 'filthy' rich which only constitutes a maximum of 3% of your population... Why do those (more than) 50% care for those 3%, they certainly don't care for you?....

    The answer is simple: More than 50% of the US voting population believe they actually are filthy rich, but experiencing temporary cash-flow problems. That is, they all plan to be in the top 3% within the next year or so.

    Ah, the sweet seductive myth of a classless society and economic mobility....

    And that's not even the most preposterous thing that most Americans believe.

  22. Re:Great! on Instagram Loses Almost Half Its Daily Users In a Month · · Score: 1

    The sooner instagram dies the better. There are great cameras in smartphones now, it's crazy people want to make their photos look like crap with filters.

    How dare they want something that you don't want! They must be stopped!

  23. Re:Correlation, Causation, blah blah on America's Real Criminal Element: Lead · · Score: 0

    Absolutely correct! For all we know, the correlation could be the other way around: Violent criminal behavior causes lead poisoning. For example, when someone gets all criminally violent at me I shoot him full of lead. QED, cogito propter unum. In your face, "science"!

  24. Re:Windows 8 Is Failing on It's [sic] Own on 'Gorilla Arm' Will Keep Touch Screens From Taking Over · · Score: 1

    I remember the broom exercise at school. Funny, isn't it? Big strong lads can't do it for more than 45 seconds. I thought I'd try it myself given that I'm not 12 any more. I got bored after 5 minutes. Sure, my shoulder aches a little bit, but I reckon I had another 10 minutes of holding my arm out, stock still.

    Same here. I'm in terrible shape, haven't been to the gym in over a year. Picked up a broom just now and held it at arms length with one hand out to the side for 5 minutes, which seems long enough to prove the point.

    As a teenager I heard a similar challenge involving holding the empty hand horizontally at arms length for five minutes. After 25 minutes without the slightest tiredness I got bored and quit. I figured I was just too skinny or something -- twiggy nerd arms must be easier to hold up than big muscly jock arms.

    I'm pretty sure this "can't hold arm straight out for n minutes" is pure myth. Strange that so few people actually bother to try it.

  25. Re:It's also pretty old on NVIDIA Releases Fix For Dangerous Display Driver Exploit · · Score: 1

    If it is on XP you have a lot more security issues than this card though.

    Such as?

    I have a few XP systems that are still getting regular automatic patches and updates from Microsoft. You seem pretty confident that all XP systems are vulnerable, so you must be aware of something specific. Care to share?