That certainly is a problem. A brute force solution to that problem is to make sure the network has enough "non-government" nodes to drive down the probability figures in such analyses. I guess if the probability of identifying an end node is low enough, that also makes it less likely for the government to seek warrants. (Unless they are just trying to bring down all nodes of the network.)
The I2P website has a list of different threat models and links to related papers. I guess this one falls under partitioning attacks.
I'm not sure I'm qualified but, in loose wording. The entity running N nodes should not know how long the bounce length is. In that way it cannot determine if the nodes it is talking to are endpoints or just routing nodes. Also, since the data is encrypted, the entity cannot read it in transit.
They have more members than the green party , which HAS seats in parliament.
Looking at the pirate partys web page, they clearly state (on the first page) that they have roughly half the number of members as the green party. Furthermore, the green party got 5.24% last election being the coalition party with least votes, while the pirate party got 0.63%, behind SD and FI which got 2.93% and 0.68% respectively. So saying that the pirate party was close to a seat in parliment is not really true at all.
Actually, they didn't forget it, they bundled it with TRS-80 under the Apple II entry, "competitors like the Commodore 64 and TRS-80 Color Computer were mere toys by comparison". And that's pretty much where I stopped reading...
Some Swedish banks use OTP devices like these http://www.actividentity.com/products/tokens_otp__ home.php (I've got one like the third one down on that page). The device I use is accessed with a PIN code and then used to sign a challenge when logging in, it's also used to sign new target accounts when transferring money and to sign the amount of money at each transfer.
You have to pick up the device in person and provide ID and they also make you set the PIN when you check it out. All the signing might be a bit of a hassle, but feels way easier than handling dual passwords and sheets of one time codes like some banks. I don't know anyone who has a problem using it.
Given the level of security this provides it's a great solution for the customers.
No, that's just common sense. You get what you pay for, and if doubling or tripling the wages for laying the roof affects the total costs of building your house in a major way, there's something seriously wrong. If you don't realize that, you're free to check up the 'facts' yourself, I'm not about to do comparative construction cost analysis on a sunday evening.
If paying the hours of Joe the nail driving roof guy is a major cost factor when building a house, the house is probably too cheap and won't stand a hurricane anyway. Joe can probably use fewer screws further apart and still get a better result than this alleged super-nail at roughly the same price, only increasing costs of wages.
Watching a solid block of aluminium. Now that's time well spent. Kids today and their TV sets.
On the topic of strange Slashdot behaviour. Can anyone explain why Slashdot comments often look like this? This is with Firefox 3.0.11 in Ubuntu.
That certainly is a problem. A brute force solution to that problem is to make sure the network has enough "non-government" nodes to drive down the probability figures in such analyses. I guess if the probability of identifying an end node is low enough, that also makes it less likely for the government to seek warrants. (Unless they are just trying to bring down all nodes of the network.)
The I2P website has a list of different threat models and links to related papers. I guess this one falls under partitioning attacks.
I'm not sure I'm qualified but, in loose wording. The entity running N nodes should not know how long the bounce length is. In that way it cannot determine if the nodes it is talking to are endpoints or just routing nodes. Also, since the data is encrypted, the entity cannot read it in transit.
From a glance, it looks like drawing is done via directfb.
There was a question about this on the Axum forum, where Niklas elaborates some about the inspirations for Axum.
It had been a wonderful evening and what I needed now, to give it the perfect ending, was a little of the Non-Van.
Sounds interesting, can you link to a good source with more info?
Looking at the pirate partys web page, they clearly state (on the first page) that they have roughly half the number of members as the green party. Furthermore, the green party got 5.24% last election being the coalition party with least votes, while the pirate party got 0.63%, behind SD and FI which got 2.93% and 0.68% respectively. So saying that the pirate party was close to a seat in parliment is not really true at all.
Yeah, it's a real shame you can't make money of your hobby.
I grew my own heart valve once.
Dan Brown, is that you?
Actually, they didn't forget it, they bundled it with TRS-80 under the Apple II entry, "competitors like the Commodore 64 and TRS-80 Color Computer were mere toys by comparison". And that's pretty much where I stopped reading...
Some Swedish banks use OTP devices like these http://www.actividentity.com/products/tokens_otp__ home.php (I've got one like the third one down on that page). The device I use is accessed with a PIN code and then used to sign a challenge when logging in, it's also used to sign new target accounts when transferring money and to sign the amount of money at each transfer.
You have to pick up the device in person and provide ID and they also make you set the PIN when you check it out. All the signing might be a bit of a hassle, but feels way easier than handling dual passwords and sheets of one time codes like some banks. I don't know anyone who has a problem using it.
Given the level of security this provides it's a great solution for the customers.
Quoting Torvalds from the 2.6.19 release announcement:
'So go get it. It's one of those rare "perfect" kernels.'
They should cast Sean Patrick Flanery as Indy and Harrisson Ford as Jones Sr. Then maybe they could do a decent movie.
No, that's just common sense. You get what you pay for, and if doubling or tripling the wages for laying the roof affects the total costs of building your house in a major way, there's something seriously wrong. If you don't realize that, you're free to check up the 'facts' yourself, I'm not about to do comparative construction cost analysis on a sunday evening.
If paying the hours of Joe the nail driving roof guy is a major cost factor when building a house, the house is probably too cheap and won't stand a hurricane anyway. Joe can probably use fewer screws further apart and still get a better result than this alleged super-nail at roughly the same price, only increasing costs of wages.
And yet, still no combined bottle opener/usb memory.
Typical slashdot to count dimensions in binary.
You might want to check out googles list of OSS projects: http://code.google.com/projects.html
Perhaps they meant it's either not reliable or it's dependable.
I see, thank you lachlan76 for clarifying bmgoau's point. :)
What's your point? It's impossible to send objects from earth to the sun due to earths gravity field?