i wonder if these legislative changes will mean the spooks will let outsourcers touch their gear. they'll now have the ability to look far more closley inside the large US corps.
To quote the article, "[either] way, there is no dispute that eNom shut down Mr. Marshall's sites without notifying him and has refused to release the domain names to him." He's unable to use another registrar for the affected domains as, for some reason, eNom have placed a lock on them.
Perhaps he can re-register them when they expire? The article doesn't specify if the lock is to be permanently kept on the domain names.
Er, it's not. It could be said that Sega is using the Debian logo:) Debian went through many weeks (if not months) of discussion as to what our new logo should be. It was finally decided that the "swirl" with the bottle should be the official logo, and that the plain swirl is the logo that can be used by anyone. Then, Sega went and stole all our good planning.
I suggest the Australian government get into the search business. There's obviously an opportunity here.
We were, we got out:
http://www.csiro.au/news/ps19r.html
http://www.csiro.au/science/Panoptic.html
i wonder if these legislative changes will mean the spooks will let outsourcers touch their gear. they'll now have the ability to look far more closley inside the large US corps.
It's about as powerful as my lawnmower.
To quote the article, "[either] way, there is no dispute that eNom shut down Mr. Marshall's sites without notifying him and has refused to release the domain names to him." He's unable to use another registrar for the affected domains as, for some reason, eNom have placed a lock on them.
Perhaps he can re-register them when they expire? The article doesn't specify if the lock is to be permanently kept on the domain names.
UUCP is the way of the future.
.. to "fy", the second letter standing for Ylönen. You choose what the first letter represents.
Er, it's not. It could be said that Sega is using the Debian logo :) Debian went through many weeks (if not months) of discussion as to what our new logo should be. It was finally decided that the "swirl" with the bottle should be the official logo, and that the plain swirl is the logo that can be used by anyone. Then, Sega went and stole all our good planning.