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User: GCsoftware

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  1. Re:When Sharia Law is imposed... on Saudi Students In US Seek Segregation By Gender On Facebook · · Score: 2

    An asylum seeker behind the bins, too.

  2. Re:GSM Roaming on Egypt Cuts the Net, Net Fights Back · · Score: 1

    Well there's always Taba, where you can pick up an Israeli network or possibly even a Jordanian one.

  3. Re:What's the Catch? on Egypt Cuts the Net, Net Fights Back · · Score: 2

    Being that the Czechoslovakian revolution was peaceful and led to a prosperous modern state, and the Romanian one was bloody and messy and led to a clusterfuck that persists to this day, I'd say you were flat-out wrong. I don't think pushing the Egyptians into a civil war is a great idea to be honest...

  4. Re:Internet is not a curiosity anymore on UK ISPs Consider VPN To Avoid Piracy Crackdown · · Score: 1

    Oooh, entire corporations. Well, I better give up all my rights then!

  5. Re:Who else hasn't read his copy of volume three? on Volume 4A of Knuth's TAOCP Finally In Print · · Score: 1

    Yup, I've got an original 1541 Ultimate with the Ethernet port. Coolest Commodore 8 bit peripheral ever.

  6. Re:So what? on Major Security Holes Found In Mobile Bank Apps · · Score: 1
    How is this different from the Mac? I thought the initial authentication upon login opens up the Keychain?

    I thought if your iPhone was PIN-code protected it would use that to lock the Keychain, no?

  7. Re:So what? on Major Security Holes Found In Mobile Bank Apps · · Score: 1
    I'll be honest and say I don't really know much about the details of iPhone encryption, but would it be fair to say that without the PIN code, it is not possible to get access to the Keychain database on the phone?

    And trying to bruteforce the PIN code would cause the device to get wiped / locked?

    I'm asking, because if this is not the case, then bruteforcing the Keychain might be trivial assuming most people use 4-5 number PINs...

  8. Re:So what? on Major Security Holes Found In Mobile Bank Apps · · Score: 1
    The encryption bit of the keychain is AES, which is effectively unbreakable as far as current tech goes. However, as I mentioned it uses the user's login password (by default) as the seed to the session key, which might reduce the keyspace quite a bit, if the user has a weak password.

    So no, not quite the same. In case a device is stolen, the attacker would need to have access to the user's password or PIN (I think the iPhone encrypts the device's whole storage anyway if it is PIN-protected, so you can't just copy the keychain database off the device and try to bruteforce it).

  9. Re:So what? on Major Security Holes Found In Mobile Bank Apps · · Score: 5, Informative
    I take it you've never heard of the OS-level security feature called Keychain, present on both OS X and iOS - basically, it's a way of storing data in an encrypted form, using the user's login password (or PIN) as the seed for the encryption key. Not unbreakable, but surely a hell of a lot better than plaintext.

    Considering this ships as default with the OS, it's inexcusable to not use it. Morons.

    See below for more details:

    http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/Security/Conceptual/keychainServConcepts/iPhoneTasks/iPhoneTasks.html
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keychain_(Mac_OS)

  10. Re:Interference in another country's laws on Obama Won't Intervene Over British Hacker McKinnon · · Score: 1

    What on Earth are you talking about? Scotland is part of the UK. David Cameron is the UK Prime Minister. And you're telling me he has no grounds to interfere? I must seriously be missing something here.

    Yes you are seriously missing something, a fundamental understanding of British politics. Criminal justice is devolved to the Scottish Government, a reasonably autonomous part of the United Kingdom. The prime minister (i.e. the executive branch of the federal structure. Yes, I know it's not really federal in the true sense of the word but it's close enough for an analogy in this case) can no more directly interfere with court decisions taken by a devolved judiciary than your (federal) President can interfere with decisions taken by a State judiciary. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_devolution#Scotland for more details if interested. Checks and balances? We have them over here too you know.

  11. Re:Flow of Information on Turkey Has Reportedly Banned Google · · Score: 1

    Basically, Turkey (including some of the military) wants accession to the European Union. The EU can thus set terms for accession treaties, including restrictions on the military's role in political life. Because of these restrictions, the military is impeded from blocking the current religious AKP party from ruling - an unfortunate side effect, not the desired end result of a fundamental EU policy that member states' governments must be of a certain liberal democratic standard. Whether the AKP actually wants Shariah or not is highly debatable, they are a pretty moderate party as far as I can tell, when I was last in Istanbul (January) it certainly did not feel like a state under an Islamic regime, not even to the extent that something like Dubai does.

  12. Re:$3300.00 on Texas Man Pleads Guilty To Building Botnet-For-Hire · · Score: 1

    But if they've coded it sanely, the private key is never stored on the bots, and the public key is used merely for verifying the validity of the command. I guess this is the impossible end of your scale.

  13. Re:I crossed from Taba to Eilat a few times.. on Israeli Border Police Shoot US Student's Laptop · · Score: 1

    Little problem - can't get out of the Sinai without a passport to GET to my embassy.

  14. I crossed from Taba to Eilat a few times.. on Israeli Border Police Shoot US Student's Laptop · · Score: 1

    ...the first time was fine, but they broke my passport (by accident, the ID page basically detached from the booklet) on my way back into Egypt. The second time, I crossed with the same (fixed with superglue) passport a few weeks later. Much shouting and pointing of guns ensued - and they took my shoes and belt away for chemical testing or something. Weirdest freaking border crossing I've ever had, but considering the shit the Israelis have to put up with it's sort of understandable, I guess. Sampsa

  15. Re:Bold claim... on Apple Blurs the Server Line With Mac Mini Server · · Score: 1

    The difficulty in setting these things up usually comes when you ask, "Well what if I want to do something off-the-wall and whacky?"

    Which the VAST majority of users of a device such as this couldn't care less about - they just want a couple of services (AFP/SMB, DNS, Mail and basic Web) to work, pretty much out of the box - OS X Server is ideal for this.

    If you DO want to go beyond the basic settings, there is (on Leopard server at least) an "Advanced" settings mode (which is pretty much identical to the Server Admin interface on Tiger). Since this is OS X, if even the Advanced settings don't let you do what you want, just open up Terminal.app and start hacking config files - the point is, the vast majority of users don't need to or want to do this level of customisation.

  16. Re:Even Stranger...... on Microsoft Poland Photoshops Black Guy To White One · · Score: 1

    Informative? How the HELL is that informative?

  17. Re:upgrade versus... on Apple, Google, AT&T Respond To the FCC Over Google Voice · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seriously? Another expense of what, 10-20 USD? Is your time is worth that little to you?

  18. Re:Jesus Fucking Christ on UK Plans To Monitor 20,000 Families' Homes Via CCTV · · Score: 1
    "Latest estimates show the tax take from Scotland - buoyed by the financial success of companies such as Royal Bank of Scotland - is higher than anywhere outside London."

    I think I read somewhere that the entire Scottish economy would have collapsed due to the RBS bail out, so you might want to revise this particular "busted myth".

    Ah yes, here it is: Vince Cable: 'RBS would break Scotland'

  19. Re:Could we get a "duh" tag? on Survey Finds Airport Wi-Fi More Important Than Food · · Score: 1

    If you ever need to eat something in London Heathrow, head for the Prunier Caviar House Seafood Bar. Absolutely wonderful - a plate of Kamchatka King Crab with a glass of Chablis makes the whole Heathrow experience tolerable.

  20. PowerTraveller maybe? on Solar Power Pre-Deployment To Afghanistan? · · Score: 2, Informative

    Whilst I haven't used their solar products, I do have a v1 PowerMonkey and love it. Their solargorilla product seems to do what you need:

    https://powertraveller.com/iwantsome/primatepower/solargorilla/

  21. Re:Graphical BBS Terminal Client on The Finns Who Invented the Graphical Browser · · Score: 1

    Any chance of maybe having a look at that? I'd love to get something like that running.

  22. Re:Not going to change much on Political and Technical Implications of GitTorrent · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is a problem in search of a solution.

    I believe you meant "solution in search of a problem."

  23. Re:Muscle Cramps? on Stretching Before Exercising Weakens Muscles · · Score: 1

    Eating before scuba diving on the other hand is just unpleasant - funny tasting burps in the regulator, weird acid reflux from being prone and face down etc.

  24. Re:Free vs "free". on OpenOffice.org V3.0 Sets Download Record, 80% Windows · · Score: 3, Informative

    Um maybe you need to read more carefully but the link in the GGP is actually to a scam site (piratebay.com), not the legitimate Pirate bay (thepiratebay.com)

  25. Re:You should never use Skype on ASUS Integrates VOIP and PSTN Into Motherboards · · Score: 1

    Uh just checked that Badware site that you link to - Skype is not mentioned. I realise that Skype is not open source (or open anything really - proprietary protocol et al) but it's not fair to call it badware, as it installs no adware or spyware on the host it runs on. No need to spread FUD about it though.

    Disclaimer: I don't work for Skype and have no commercial relationship with them aside from being a more or less satisfied customer.