Regardless, I reboot all my linux, unix and bsd boxes once a month too. Just to be sure anything can rebooted by a noc monkey without disturbing my sleep.
During daytime, yes. Redundancy is a lie unless you test it periodically.
Also, fuel fires are easier to deal with. Just spray a bunch of foam everywhere and you're pretty much good.
You seem to seriously underestimate the amount of science that goes into extinguishing fires. The average crash tender carries five completely different systems for fighting various fires, and every fire department has a sixth one ready. Then again: the stuff that they carry isn't designed for the kind of danger a high power car battery poses. But, expect larger L2 firefighting systems becoming standard on your average fire truck real soon now.
Sure?
One way to deliver 2.99GJ is to strap the prisoner to 955 kilograms (2100 lbs) of TNT and detonate that. For some reason that seems quite a bit excessive.
One Bruce Schneier is a (loud) advocate for increasing the number of rounds in AES. Currently it's set at 16, and he advocates increasing it to much more.
His main reason for this is that there's a differential crypto-analysis attack against known plaintext data encrypted with reduced rounds AES implementations.
In short: If you know or control some of the encrypted data, you can extract bits of the key by comparing changes between encrypted known data. The bits you gain reduce the keyspace you need to search.
AES according to the guidelines isn't vulnerable for this. Yet.
You are very correct. Take for instance OpenVPN. It uses RSA to exchange an random AES session key. RSA and AES/DES/3DES have different uses, and replacing RSA with AES is simply not possible.
Just try wikipedia before replying on a subject you don't know shit about.
31st century BC is perhaps a bit doubtful. It's shitting in a trench with running water. But, something you would recognise as a toilet appeared in Richmond Palace in 1596. Too bad Queen Elizabeth (the first) refused to use it because of the noise it made.
A bowl you shit in, with a drain, and a flushing apparatus above it.
While on holiday in Northumberland and Cumbria I was actually pleasantly surprised by the speed and coverage and even the price for 3G data. £25 for a huawei dongle and 2Gbyte data. At the time I would have paid €100 down here for the same hardware and number of bytes. Yes, coverage in the Pennines was restricted to near roads and villages, but that is to be expected.
NXP, google it yourself, don't believe me. NXP's Mifare is insecure, used in Oyster, OV-Chip and a few other very large deployments. Similar weak chipsets are found inside key fobs. Similar problems. Trivially exploitable. Just listening and some knowledge of the platform is enough to predict the next 'secure' exchange. And steal the car. Embarrassing: the next car could as well be a extremely expensive Mercedes Benz S-class.
In other words: Cyberbunker is not currently under assault by police, and we have only their word that they ever have been. I suspect that at one time they were successful in having visiting cops think nobody was home by being real quiet and quickly turning off all the lights.
This is the second company called Cyberbunker in this bunker. The previous one, also closely tied to cb3rob (the Kamphuis in TFA) had 'problems' like a fire in their XTC-laboratory, after which the CEO and some staff spend months in custody.
This is a PRELIMINARY REPORT that looks at potential solutions to rising energy costs and e-waste within the EU by helping people use less power. It merely outlines a variety of means through which this can be achieved in the EU. What is outlined in the shambolic article above is merely one part of this large, well sourced report.
I know I'm a bit of a nerd, but I know my prefix (2001:470:XXXX::) and after the double double colon I am master of my domain, so my website lives on::10, the mailserver on::20 etc. If you can remember a ipv4 address, ipv6 shouldn't be more difficult, in general.
Damn. Fresh out of mod-points, and somebody says something insightful instead of -1 troll or -1 flamebait.
FWIW: I have 5 different models of nokia-charger. Some are 'backward' compatible (ie: it takes a day to charge your phone), others wont even fit the wrong phone. I have 4 different models of motorola-charger (all are mutually incompatible. the plug fits, but it doesn't charge).
I have two models of Apple charger. Both use an USB-connector and a cable. One is slow, the other is fast, but only when charging my iPad. iPod and iPhone charge at the same pace. Better still: iPad, iPod and Iphone charge from any USB-port. iPad charges slow, iPod and iPhone charge at usual speed.
From where I'm standing Apple has been doing what the EU wants since 2003.
Enough neonicotionoid progress and you might have nothing left to eat. Or take turns pollinating the plants that will become your food with a brush.
> Sharia Law is over there . . . .
I'm pretty sure Sharia law predate cameras by a good eleven or twelve centuries.
> Windows can't run a month w/o needing a reboot
Regardless, I reboot all my linux, unix and bsd boxes once a month too. Just to be sure anything can rebooted by a noc monkey without disturbing my sleep.
During daytime, yes. Redundancy is a lie unless you test it periodically.
between spending those modpoints,
and saying the inevitable 'all your temperatures are belong to us'
dang!
No need to, it's built into the OS. It even has a nice cli to handle starting, stopping and logging. ttysnoop.
However, getting sufficient permissions is the hard bit, especially for a remote attacker.
Pavement (material), the durable surfacing of roads and walkways;
Also, fuel fires are easier to deal with. Just spray a bunch of foam everywhere and you're pretty much good.
You seem to seriously underestimate the amount of science that goes into extinguishing fires. The average crash tender carries five completely different systems for fighting various fires, and every fire department has a sixth one ready. Then again: the stuff that they carry isn't designed for the kind of danger a high power car battery poses. But, expect larger L2 firefighting systems becoming standard on your average fire truck real soon now.
Sure? One way to deliver 2.99GJ is to strap the prisoner to 955 kilograms (2100 lbs) of TNT and detonate that. For some reason that seems quite a bit excessive.
Ah. DJB and JF. The mad math professors. Thanks for your comments. Sadly no modpoints, so the reward is platonic.
One Bruce Schneier is a (loud) advocate for increasing the number of rounds in AES. Currently it's set at 16, and he advocates increasing it to much more. His main reason for this is that there's a differential crypto-analysis attack against known plaintext data encrypted with reduced rounds AES implementations. In short: If you know or control some of the encrypted data, you can extract bits of the key by comparing changes between encrypted known data. The bits you gain reduce the keyspace you need to search. AES according to the guidelines isn't vulnerable for this. Yet.
You need upvotes, but I'm out of modpoints.
You are very correct. Take for instance OpenVPN. It uses RSA to exchange an random AES session key. RSA and AES/DES/3DES have different uses, and replacing RSA with AES is simply not possible.
Just try wikipedia before replying on a subject you don't know shit about.
31st century BC is perhaps a bit doubtful. It's shitting in a trench with running water. But, something you would recognise as a toilet appeared in Richmond Palace in 1596. Too bad Queen Elizabeth (the first) refused to use it because of the noise it made.
A bowl you shit in, with a drain, and a flushing apparatus above it.
While on holiday in Northumberland and Cumbria I was actually pleasantly surprised by the speed and coverage and even the price for 3G data. £25 for a huawei dongle and 2Gbyte data. At the time I would have paid €100 down here for the same hardware and number of bytes. Yes, coverage in the Pennines was restricted to near roads and villages, but that is to be expected.
$ host ntp0.bbc.co.uk
ntp0.bbc.co.uk has address 132.185.132.130
NXP, google it yourself, don't believe me. NXP's Mifare is insecure, used in Oyster, OV-Chip and a few other very large deployments. Similar weak chipsets are found inside key fobs. Similar problems. Trivially exploitable. Just listening and some knowledge of the platform is enough to predict the next 'secure' exchange. And steal the car. Embarrassing: the next car could as well be a extremely expensive Mercedes Benz S-class.
Well.. I have 1648 paying Xen-customers and 1 paying KVM-customer.
If it were my money I'd go for Xen. Like I did.
(for context: the average customer pays roughly $100 per month..)
EJECT EJECT EJECT
Have the SWAT team bust down their door and hall their asses to jail.
Smart! Leave nobody to switch off the botnet!
In other words: Cyberbunker is not currently under assault by police, and we have only their word that they ever have been. I suspect that at one time they were successful in having visiting cops think nobody was home by being real quiet and quickly turning off all the lights.
This is the second company called Cyberbunker in this bunker. The previous one, also closely tied to cb3rob (the Kamphuis in TFA) had 'problems' like a fire in their XTC-laboratory, after which the CEO and some staff spend months in custody.
Read the actual document people.
This is not policy.
This is not even draft policy.
THIS IS NOT EVEN RESEARCH INTO POLICY.
This is a PRELIMINARY REPORT that looks at potential solutions to rising energy costs and e-waste within the EU by helping people use less power. It merely outlines a variety of means through which this can be achieved in the EU. What is outlined in the shambolic article above is merely one part of this large, well sourced report.
Yet more BS made up by Europhobes.
summary written by spam robot
marked as unreadable
parse error,
core dumped
*What the bloody fucking fuck* is this about? If you run wifi you cannot brake in time? What how why is this correlated to brakes?
I know I'm a bit of a nerd, but I know my prefix (2001:470:XXXX::) and after the double double colon I am master of my domain, so my website lives on ::10, the mailserver on ::20 etc. If you can remember a ipv4 address, ipv6 shouldn't be more difficult, in general.
Damn. Fresh out of mod-points, and somebody says something insightful instead of -1 troll or -1 flamebait.
FWIW: I have 5 different models of nokia-charger. Some are 'backward' compatible (ie: it takes a day to charge your phone), others wont even fit the wrong phone. I have 4 different models of motorola-charger (all are mutually incompatible. the plug fits, but it doesn't charge).
I have two models of Apple charger. Both use an USB-connector and a cable. One is slow, the other is fast, but only when charging my iPad. iPod and iPhone charge at the same pace. Better still: iPad, iPod and Iphone charge from any USB-port. iPad charges slow, iPod and iPhone charge at usual speed.
From where I'm standing Apple has been doing what the EU wants since 2003.
Your IMEI is 00-000000-000000. Remember that the checksum calculation is optional.
Can't mod you +1 troll, sadly.