Easy way to get data past DHS/TSA. If multiple people are ultimately traveling to the same destination, like a trade show or company meeting, use a RAID 5 array and have each person carry a separate hard drive with them on different flights. Even if DHS/TSA took one of your drives, as long as 2 make it to the destination, you can rebuild the missing one.
Remind me again how this is different from the days of cassette tapes and VHS. People have been recording songs off the radio for years. And the same with recording videos off the tube with VHS tapes. Either way, we're still recording songs and video for FREE to watch as often as we like.
The one thing that really suck is... Even if he's not charged with anything, I'll bet he gets his equipment back in bits and pieces. (if he gets it back at all)
I think those jerks (feds and local police) sometimes do things like this to "teach them a lesson". Piss them off and they'll get a search warrant to come and trash your house. The person was "suspected" of manufacturing drugs in their house. The person was "suspected" of being in possession of stolen goods. I think you get my point. Come up with a reason to get a warrant and go teach him a lesson. Even if he's cleared, they've still trashed his house and his PC.
Geez... how hard can it be people? Just make it a point to change your PIN every few weeks or so. I change mine on a regular basis. This makes any stored data related to my PIN basically worthless.
Screw them. I say drive them nuts. Make your payments erratic all the time. If millions of people start doing this purposely all the time, how can they possibly manage all of it? Would be fun to open an account at two or three different banks and move $10,000 of it from bank to bank every other day. Nothing illegal done. But you'd generate a lot of extra work for those idiots.
I wonder how many times a patent application has resulted in men in black suits showing up at the door of the person applying for the patent? For example, let's say someone files a patent application for some new type of weapon or something that could be of interest to the military. I could imagine a scenario where men in black suits show up and confiscate all data and information related to someones patent then threatens them with their life if they continue any related work. But even if you were granted a patent for a new weapon, would the details of the patent be kept under wraps?
Re:Well, duh. (and other fun uses for RFID tags)
on
The Trouble with RFID
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· Score: 1
Hey... where'd I leave my TV remote? Just scan the house for it.
If anyone was really serious about using a computer to copy money and they're stupid enough to have that machine connected to the internet, then they would deserve to get caught. If you're gonna do something like this, isolate that machine from any kind of outside connection and then wipe the drive when finished.
Has anyone with PS 8 tried experimenting with it a little? What if you take a 20 and lay it on top of a black sheet of paper only exposing... say... 10% for starters. How much of the bill has to be exposed before the program rejects it? If you expose certain quadrants or parts of the bill, is there any one quadrant or section that causes it to be rejected? Perhaps one could zero in on the triggering machanism this way. If you can get away with scanning sections of the bill, couldn't you scan the bill in sections and reassemble a complete one?
Easy way to get data past DHS/TSA. If multiple people are ultimately traveling to the same destination, like a trade show or company meeting, use a RAID 5 array and have each person carry a separate hard drive with them on different flights. Even if DHS/TSA took one of your drives, as long as 2 make it to the destination, you can rebuild the missing one.
Remind me again how this is different from the days of cassette tapes and VHS. People have been recording songs off the radio for years. And the same with recording videos off the tube with VHS tapes. Either way, we're still recording songs and video for FREE to watch as often as we like.
A cookie tin makes a nice Faraday cage.
Anonymous, where are you when we need you?
OMG! They're gonna clone Roseanne Barr?
IR filters anyone????
The update along with the unwanted apps came down to my phone months ago. Root the phone and uninstall any app you don't want.
DHsSuCksA$$!
The one thing that really suck is... Even if he's not charged with anything, I'll bet he gets his equipment back in bits and pieces. (if he gets it back at all) I think those jerks (feds and local police) sometimes do things like this to "teach them a lesson". Piss them off and they'll get a search warrant to come and trash your house. The person was "suspected" of manufacturing drugs in their house. The person was "suspected" of being in possession of stolen goods. I think you get my point. Come up with a reason to get a warrant and go teach him a lesson. Even if he's cleared, they've still trashed his house and his PC.
Geez... how hard can it be people? Just make it a point to change your PIN every few weeks or so. I change mine on a regular basis. This makes any stored data related to my PIN basically worthless.
Screw them. I say drive them nuts. Make your payments erratic all the time. If millions of people start doing this purposely all the time, how can they possibly manage all of it? Would be fun to open an account at two or three different banks and move $10,000 of it from bank to bank every other day. Nothing illegal done. But you'd generate a lot of extra work for those idiots.
I wonder how many times a patent application has resulted in men in black suits showing up at the door of the person applying for the patent? For example, let's say someone files a patent application for some new type of weapon or something that could be of interest to the military. I could imagine a scenario where men in black suits show up and confiscate all data and information related to someones patent then threatens them with their life if they continue any related work. But even if you were granted a patent for a new weapon, would the details of the patent be kept under wraps?
Hey... where'd I leave my TV remote? Just scan the house for it.
If anyone was really serious about using a computer to copy money and they're stupid enough to have that machine connected to the internet, then they would deserve to get caught. If you're gonna do something like this, isolate that machine from any kind of outside connection and then wipe the drive when finished.
Soon as you hit the site it probably logged your IP address.
Has anyone with PS 8 tried experimenting with it a little? What if you take a 20 and lay it on top of a black sheet of paper only exposing... say... 10% for starters. How much of the bill has to be exposed before the program rejects it? If you expose certain quadrants or parts of the bill, is there any one quadrant or section that causes it to be rejected? Perhaps one could zero in on the triggering machanism this way. If you can get away with scanning sections of the bill, couldn't you scan the bill in sections and reassemble a complete one?