You are absolutely right! A two thousand kilometer circle from here would include large parts of the Middle East and north Africa where clearly such things and worse, are not uncommon. We shouldn't have singled you out. Our sincerest apologies.
This is extremely short-sighted. Under TTIP, VW cars would not only be perfectly legal in the US but VW would be able to sue the US or the state for interfering with their sales.
Both stories could end up having a positive result for the average person but TTIP would ensure that nothing positive comes out of either.
"The Universe operates on a basic principle of economics: everything has its cost. We pay to create our future, we pay for the mistakes of the past. We pay for every change we make and we pay just as dearly if we refuse to change."
That port is allowing access to the "Connection Request" page which is only a trigger for the CPE to initiate communications with the ACS server it already knows. Unless the CPE has been hijacked and the ACS server location has been tampered with, the only thing that an unsecured Connection Request page could cause, is a DDoS attack on their servers by someone requesting connection from all their CPE's in the field.
The two ways that I can imagine TR-069 being exploited are DNS spoofing (CPE talks to the wrong server - someone could mess up the settings on the CPE but won't get any passwords) and access to the LAN side pretending to be a TR-069 client (could get access to any passwords sent to the "CPE" from the server).
What should be read from the CPE and what should be set on the CPE is subject to discussion on a daily basis (just did an ACS implementation at work) but the protocol itself is not the problem.
I'm Greek and I'll be the first to admit that the police can be bandits (putting it mildly) at times as the OP mentioned.
While plain spotting is a well documented hobby, there is no excuse for taking pictures of airplanes in areas where there are more "no photography" signs than "no smoking" signs. On top of that, noting the plain numbers in crossword puzzles is not exactly "openly" collecting data.
As for spies, i don't thing they all drive Aston Martins, wear black suits and sunglasses.
I'm not trying to defend the actions of the police. They should have let them go with a warning, perhaps confiscate any cameras or film rolls if they wanted to cover their backs, but lets call a spade a spade. These guys hadn't done their homework. They went on holiday to a place where photographing military installations (most airports in Greece are classed as that) is prohibited, they found out they shouldn't take the pictures but they went ahead anyway thinking they can get away with it.
it's a well known performance issue. Pick a table you don't need, and try "delete * from table", then try it again while sounding angry "DELETE * FROM TABLE" and I'm sure you'll find the second returns much faster...
Since we are flipping the flipping argument, let's flip once more. How much would you, the consumer would accept on top of your monthly bill to cover the cost of your ISP keeping your children safe?
Why are they using magnets and other funny methods like that to "accelerate" photons? Why don't they just heat up some metal for example, perhaps in the shape of a filament by passing a decent amount of current through it? Or use some kind of diode arrangement? Or even simpler, just set some good old hydrocarbons on fire. That should do it. Then they could focus on that interesting JSF idea;)
I thought they were not supposed to appear for another few thousand years. They are obviously moving into the first experimental stages of their master plan;)
That would be really tricky. TAT-10, the link between the States and Germany, was using a 10KV potential difference between the two ends to power 90 something repeaters along the route at less than 1A. What kind of ratings would something like this need?
You are absolutely right! A two thousand kilometer circle from here would include large parts of the Middle East and north Africa where clearly such things and worse, are not uncommon. We shouldn't have singled you out. Our sincerest apologies.
This is extremely short-sighted. Under TTIP, VW cars would not only be perfectly legal in the US but VW would be able to sue the US or the state for interfering with their sales.
Both stories could end up having a positive result for the average person but TTIP would ensure that nothing positive comes out of either.
Credit where credit is due
Well, since you brought it up...
"The Universe operates on a basic principle of economics: everything has its cost. We pay to create our future, we pay for the mistakes of the past. We pay for every change we make and we pay just as dearly if we refuse to change."
-Guild Bank Annals, Philosophical Register
That port is allowing access to the "Connection Request" page which is only a trigger for the CPE to initiate communications with the ACS server it already knows. Unless the CPE has been hijacked and the ACS server location has been tampered with, the only thing that an unsecured Connection Request page could cause, is a DDoS attack on their servers by someone requesting connection from all their CPE's in the field.
The two ways that I can imagine TR-069 being exploited are DNS spoofing (CPE talks to the wrong server - someone could mess up the settings on the CPE but won't get any passwords) and access to the LAN side pretending to be a TR-069 client (could get access to any passwords sent to the "CPE" from the server).
What should be read from the CPE and what should be set on the CPE is subject to discussion on a daily basis (just did an ACS implementation at work) but the protocol itself is not the problem.
This thread is going nowhere.
I'm afraid it will never get there.
Since it's used to set up a USB flash drive, does the tool happen to contain code to read/write to a FAT filesystem?
Highly unlikely. What are the odds of the contractor re-implementing part of the windows API?
Those crumple zones werent needed for the guy in the steel car.
He was only lucky that he hit a "fibreglass" car. If it was another steel car, the result might have been a lot different.
I'm Greek and I'll be the first to admit that the police can be bandits (putting it mildly) at times as the OP mentioned.
While plain spotting is a well documented hobby, there is no excuse for taking pictures of airplanes in areas where there are more "no photography" signs than "no smoking" signs. On top of that, noting the plain numbers in crossword puzzles is not exactly "openly" collecting data.
As for spies, i don't thing they all drive Aston Martins, wear black suits and sunglasses.
I'm not trying to defend the actions of the police. They should have let them go with a warning, perhaps confiscate any cameras or film rolls if they wanted to cover their backs, but lets call a spade a spade. These guys hadn't done their homework. They went on holiday to a place where photographing military installations (most airports in Greece are classed as that) is prohibited, they found out they shouldn't take the pictures but they went ahead anyway thinking they can get away with it.
it's a well known performance issue. Pick a table you don't need, and try "delete * from table", then try it again while sounding angry "DELETE * FROM TABLE" and I'm sure you'll find the second returns much faster...
Since we are flipping the flipping argument, let's flip once more. How much would you, the consumer would accept on top of your monthly bill to cover the cost of your ISP keeping your children safe?
Not sure about that but I'm sure that a drunk nun would be more likely to get pregnant
Who let the kitten out? The kitten should not be accessible. 363 No More Kitten
And I just realised we are on the same timezone. Well, hi from both of us.
You don't count. Your timezone is between the UK and the US zones. Hi from Holland :)
6 hours at 120? would the microwave do the trick in 30' at defrost?
There's also the problem that defacing us currency is quite illegal.
Not only that but it actually hurts the whole idea as a marked bill will be taken off circulation as soon as a bank gets its hands on it.
Once the acceleation of photons are complete,
Why are they using magnets and other funny methods like that to "accelerate" photons? Why don't they just heat up some metal for example, perhaps in the shape of a filament by passing a decent amount of current through it? Or use some kind of diode arrangement? Or even simpler, just set some good old hydrocarbons on fire. That should do it. Then they could focus on that interesting JSF idea ;)
O--->O<---O
How about this? Imagine the two objects moving towards the third one from opposite directions.
I'm not a native speaker but I think you would only use "which" instead of "what" if you were also listing the potential outcomes.
I thought they were not supposed to appear for another few thousand years. They are obviously moving into the first experimental stages of their master plan ;)
That would be really tricky. TAT-10, the link between the States and Germany, was using a 10KV potential difference between the two ends to power 90 something repeaters along the route at less than 1A. What kind of ratings would something like this need?
especially considering these things are only a handful of atoms across
I'm not sure you picked the best unit of measure for making your point there.
I completely agree. I mean think about it, there tons of atoms in a handful.
Does this mean it's actually turtles all the way IN?
short for ZZ9pZA?
which of course brings us to the conclusion that mules are sometimes (rarely) alive