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User: darkain

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  1. or don't trust the Internet on 30% of Americans Aren't Ready For the Next Generation of Technology · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And those who are extremely educated fall into the "don't trust the Internet" group quite easily. How many security exploits do we need before people stop trusting in various internet services? But not trusting it doesn't mean we stop USING it! We simply alter our actions on the internet.

  2. T-Mobile's Reponse on FTC Says T-Mobile Made Hundreds of Millions From Bogus SMS Charges · · Score: 4, Informative

    For those not clicking links, this is what T-Mobile had to say about this:

    We have seen the complaint filed today by the FTC and find it to be unfounded and without merit. In fact T-Mobile stopped billing for these Premium SMS services last year and launched a proactive program to provide full refunds for any customer that feels that they were charged for something they did not want. T-Mobile is fighting harder than any of the carriers to change the way the wireless industry operates and we are disappointed that the FTC has chosen to file this action against the most pro-consumer company in the industry rather than the real bad actors.

    As the Un-carrier, we believe that customers should only pay for what they want and what they sign up for. We exited this business late last year, and announced an aggressive program to take care of customers and we are disappointed that the FTC has instead chosen to file this sensationalized legal action. We are the first to take action for the consumer and I am calling for the entire industry to do the same.

    This is about doing what is right for consumers and we put in place procedures to protect our customers from unauthorized charges. Unfortunately, not all of these third party providers acted responsibly—an issue the entire industry faced. We believe those providers should be held accountable, and the FTC’s lawsuit seeking to hold T-Mobile responsible for their acts is not only factually and legally unfounded, but also misdirected.

    -- John Legere, CEO of T-Mobile USA

  3. Re:We want driverless cars TODAY! on US Agency Aims To Regulate Map Aids In Vehicles · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Much in the same way regulations for fuel efficiency are wasted because we have fully electric cars now....

  4. Re:Split up Google on Can Google Connect the Unconnected 2/3 To the Internet? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about we focus on Comcast / NBC / Universal / Time / Warner first?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...

  5. AWS Email on Despite Project's Demise, Amazon Web Services Continues To Use TrueCrypt · · Score: 5, Informative

    13 hours ago, Amazon / AWS sent out the following email:

    Dear Amazon S3 Customer,

    Amazon S3 now supports server side encryption with customer-provided keys (SSE-C), a new encryption option for Amazon S3. When using SSE-C, Amazon S3 encrypts your objects with the custom encryption keys that you provide. Since Amazon S3 performs the encryption for you, you get the benefits of using your encryption keys without the cost of writing or executing your own encryption code.

    Until now, in order to use your own encryption keys, you needed to encrypt your data client-side prior to uploading them to Amazon S3. With SSE-C, you now have the option to securely store your data using keys that you manage, without having to build client-side encryption infrastructure.

    To use SSE-C, simply include your custom encryption key in your upload request, and Amazon S3 encrypts the object using that key and securely stores the encrypted data at rest. Similarly, to retrieve an encrypted object, provide your custom encryption key, and Amazon S3 decrypts the object as part of the retrieval. Amazon S3 doesn't store your encryption key anywhere; the key is immediately discarded after S3 completes your requests.

    You can learn how to use SSE-C today by visiting "Using SSE with Customer-provided Keys" in the Amazon S3 Developer Guide.

    Sincerely,
    The Amazon S3 Team

  6. Re:Funny, they're not my first choices on Americans Hate TV and Internet Providers More Than Other Industries · · Score: 1

    Comcast IS NBC/Universal.
    Time Warner IS... well... Warner Bros.

    So yeah. these "ISPs" really are just some of the major players in the movie/music industry.

  7. Re:Note to myself: on The 69 Words GM Employees Can Never Say · · Score: 1

    And for anyone that has filed a bug report... if you simply list the bug as a "problem", you're doing it wrong. Detailed descriptions, please! Why should it be any different for automotive? Words like these are subjective. Simply stating: "The brakes are having a problem" doesn't say anything about what is really wrong. Stating: "The brakes failed to engage when X pressure is applied to the pedal" says a hell of a lot more.

  8. Re:Note to myself: on The 69 Words GM Employees Can Never Say · · Score: 1

    Not just that, but we even have an RFC to deal with keywords within RFCs. Its not just exclusion lists, but also required usage lists.

    https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc21... http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc...

    People are simply getting bent out of shape because GM defines their language and set of standards for usage of said language. This is true of ALL large companies, and not just in these types of documents. In the tech world, we live or die by these requirements, so why is it a surprise that other industries use them too?

  9. Re:Anti-competitive on Apple To Face Lawsuit For iMessage Glitch · · Score: 0

    Internet Explorer was made free, it helped drive down the cost of web browser software, of which everyone benefited. Microsoft got slammed with an anti-trust suit for it.

  10. Re:Prime Example of Software Bloat on GitHub Open Sources Atom, Their Text Editor Based On Chromium · · Score: 1

    Not only this, but considering how uninformative this site is, I'm trying to figure out just what I would gain, if anything at all, over Sublime Text right now. Visually from their screen shots, it looks mostly the same? So, besides that, what features ARE there that make this project unique compared to other offerings?

  11. Re:Nope. on It's World Password Day: Change Your Passwords · · Score: 1

    This is because Microsoft doesn't change stored passwords on Hotmail when they update policies for the service... Case in point, my dummy account from the '90's still has a password that is well under the minimum number of characters required to login. Very short, sweet, easy to remember, and cannot be brute forced because nobody would think to check a password outside of their "requirements"! (oh wait, fuck, I just admitted publicly there are passwords outside of their requirements)

  12. Security Tokens on It's World Password Day: Change Your Passwords · · Score: 1

    I use security tokens instead of passwords, and then external services use OAuth against this centralized service to verify my identity... passwords? What are those!?

  13. Re:" why T-Mobile finds it profitable" on Really, Why Are Smartphones Still Tied To Contracts? · · Score: 1

    Ookla says the exact opposite about T-Mobile: http://newsroom.t-mobile.com/p...

  14. When comments... on Theo De Raadt's Small Rant On OpenSSL · · Score: 2

    When Slashdot comments become full front page stories? This was already posted a few times as comments in the last OpenSSL post.

  15. Re:sure, no problem on Is Analog the Fix For Cyber Terrorism? · · Score: 1

    >Or maybe you could isolate control systems from the Internet

    Oh, you mean like all those systems Stuxnet infected?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

  16. Re:But He Isn't on Should Newsweek Have Outed Satoshi Nakamoto's Personal Details? · · Score: 5, Informative

    No real way to verify it, but there is a surefire way to discredit it!

    https://twitter.com/mikko/stat...

  17. No Brainer on Sochi Drones Are Shooting the Olympics, Not Terrorists · · Score: 2

    So the cost of PURCHASING a drone is about the same as RENTING a helicopter for the same time? With the drone, of course, being re-usable, and creating significantly less impact when comparing the results of a potential crash, and can get much MUCH closer to the action.

    This is seriously the best of all worlds. Now if only we can get away from the mainstream stigma of the term "Drone", such as going back to the term UAV instead? Really, the only down-side is ignorant media perception of these devices.

  18. Nexus 7 on Ask Slashdot: Top Black Friday Tech Picks? · · Score: 2

    I picked up the Asus Nexus 7 16GB (2013 edition) for $151.12 off Amazon Prime just two weeks ago... How is $199.99 a deal in comparison?

    TL;DR: Nothing is appealing this Black Friday.

  19. Re:You'll pry Windows 95 from my cold dead hands! on Windows 8.1 Rolls Out Today · · Score: 2
  20. First declassified documents? on Area 51 No Longer (Officially) a Secret · · Score: 4, Informative
  21. Re:missing the main point on First California AMBER Alert Shows AT&T's Emergency Alerts Are a Mess · · Score: 1

    State-wide, you say? About 24 hours after it hit California, I got two of them a few minutes apart... Up near Seattle WA. Yeah, no idea why, either. I'm on T-Mobile, not AT&T, too. Same cryptic message. Just tapping anywhere on the touch screen made it go away, I couldn't even screen-cap it.

  22. Re:Huh? on Using Java In Low Latency Environments · · Score: 1
  23. Olympic National Forest on Google Street View Backpack Now Available To Volunteers · · Score: 2

    A little something right here at home, I would love to take this thing hiking through the trails of the Olympic National Forest. Or really, any of the awesome mountains in the Washington area, like Mt Rainier!

  24. Re:Beware Internet Echo Chambers on Microsoft Reputation Manager's Guide To Xbox One · · Score: 1

    What, the Microsoft Cloud Services going offline!? That'll never happen!

    http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2013/02/25/windows-azure-cloud-crashed-by-expired-ssl-certificate/

  25. Re:Legislation is not the answer on Ask Slashdot: Why Do Firms Leak Personal Details In Plain Text? · · Score: 1

    The problem is, how do you know which companies do this, until AFTER the fact? The OP stated it came in an email, which is after the fact.