I see all of these articles on Slashdot about new ways to help prevent spam and forgeries but they have yet to do this themselves.
Also you, or software developers for that matter, can't call it "Yahoo! DomainKeys", read the license. IEEE should reject this the way they did with Microsoft's SenderID until they come to their senses and stop being so stingy.
Microsoft is giving away Windows XP SP2, its free security overall to the OS to both licensed and unlicensed users.
Now AOL is charging their customers wanting to keep their accounts from being used by spammers and other criminals.
Why should anyone have to pay to prevent unauthorized usage of their account?
AOL has reached a new low with this one.
I'm sure the IOC just loves Tivo's ability to let subscribers share there shows with 9 other friends.
I wonder if the IOC would like these photos on the web?
http://www.carlypatterson.com/
The test disabled the links so no one would click them but they tried to give it the same effect by using mouseovers.
Mozilla Firefox didn't show the mouseovers for some reason.
I had to view the page source to determine if the link displayed matched the address it as actually taking you.
I'm surprised so many people here have actually been fooled.
.ORG domains are too easy to get. Organizations need to have a domain that are for well known and trusted sites only.
- cross.relief
www.red-cross.help
www.red-cross.give
www.red
I find it hard to believe only 3,000 requests is the largest. I've known people to make more then 10,000 at a time.
I see all of these articles on Slashdot about new ways to help prevent spam and forgeries but they have yet to do this themselves. Also you, or software developers for that matter, can't call it "Yahoo! DomainKeys", read the license. IEEE should reject this the way they did with Microsoft's SenderID until they come to their senses and stop being so stingy.
When people start abusing this law and the public gets fed up with it congress will be left with all the blame.
Regardless of who becomes president for the next four years, we are still going to see more stupid laws like these in the future.
It's not like the casinos would even pay you the money anyway.
The FTC gets tons of complaints daily about online casino fraud.
If the person won, the casino would just say "oh, you must have been cheating" and not pay you a cent.
Microsoft is giving away Windows XP SP2, its free security overall to the OS to both licensed and unlicensed users. Now AOL is charging their customers wanting to keep their accounts from being used by spammers and other criminals. Why should anyone have to pay to prevent unauthorized usage of their account? AOL has reached a new low with this one.
Less than two years away I wonder how good of reception i will get 1 mile up? Not to mention how much the roaming charges will be.
I'm sure the IOC just loves Tivo's ability to let subscribers share there shows with 9 other friends. I wonder if the IOC would like these photos on the web? http://www.carlypatterson.com/
The test disabled the links so no one would click them but they tried to give it the same effect by using mouseovers. Mozilla Firefox didn't show the mouseovers for some reason. I had to view the page source to determine if the link displayed matched the address it as actually taking you. I'm surprised so many people here have actually been fooled.
If i had an brain extension for wikipedia i could finally beat that Ken Jennings guy on Jeopardy!
my bet is on Tivo or Google
Buy a cheap computer with a TV Output and rip the DVD's to dual 250GB hard drives