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User: MightyMartian

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  1. Re:Why bother? on Ask Slashdot: Is an Open Source .NET Up To the Job? · · Score: -1

    Likely Java. Microsoft and its astroturfers like to tell themselves faerie tales about how the big players are all bending to Redmonds, but it's just the same pathetic wishful thinking that had Redmondites insisting Unix was drying and everyone was moving to NT.

  2. Re:Why bother? on Ask Slashdot: Is an Open Source .NET Up To the Job? · · Score: 1

    Oh bullshit. Java dwarfs .NET.

  3. Re:Whether it was NK or not doesn't matter on North Korea Denies Responsibility for Sony Attack, Warns Against Retaliation · · Score: 1

    Because freedom in North Korea would be the worstest thing ever.

  4. Re:You can for the most part. on Schneier Explains How To Protect Yourself From Sony-Style Attacks (You Can't) · · Score: 1

    Yeah, because Flash drives are such a secure way to move data...

  5. Re:Which is why on Schneier Explains How To Protect Yourself From Sony-Style Attacks (You Can't) · · Score: 1

    I'm assuming that Sony, being a very large multinational company, has a very large Intranet, which means at various points its going to be traversing the open Internet at various points.

    Unless you're advocating Sony lay down its own fiber and then turn off its gateway routers....

  6. Re:Sony security: strong or weak? on Schneier Explains How To Protect Yourself From Sony-Style Attacks (You Can't) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd be interested in knowing the details of the attack. Was it a "social engineering" attack of some kind (ie. a virus-laden email that someone with high privileges opened)? Was it a vulnerability in their networks? I've heard someone with high level admin privileges had their account hacked, but in what way was it done?

    The organization I work for is a contractor for the government of a North American jurisdiction, and yesterday morning I started getting reports that some sort of virus-laden emails were flowing out of this government's networks. Sure enough, within a half an hour, I got emails from a contact I have within this particularly agency, with an attached ZIP file with an SCR file inside. That has to be one of the oldest ways that malware has been transmitted in Windows system, I saw my first virus-laden SCR file somewhere around 1997-1998.

    Apparently this critter is so new that by the time we checked, only a few AV companies had caught on to it. Even worse in some ways is that it appears that it made its debut on the very government servers in question, making me think this was a targeted attack. So you have a combination of a brand new virus of some kind that won't get caught by the scanners, lax email rules that allow the opening and execution of executable file types (not that blocking EXE variants doesn't mean some bastard won't be firing off a compromised PDF at an unpatched system), and users who through a combination of laziness and ignorance happily take the final step.

    With this particular attack, there would have been no problem if Outlook had been configured not to open these kinds of attachments, and in an Active Directory environment, that's pretty trivial, so some of the blame has to go to this government agency's IT team. But still, even with the best safeguards, where users just happily click on any old attachment, it doesn't exactly take a rare alignment of the stars to have malware planted in a network. Sure, it won't have root privileges and won't be able to propagate itself via more sophisticated means, but it appears in this case it didn't need to.

    So I do agree to some point that there are finite limits to what any person or organization can do to secure itself against a determined and directed attack. But there are ways to make such attacks much more difficult, and more quickly captured before they wreak too much harm.

  7. Re:Nobody but suits wanted a Blackberry after 2007 on Review: The BlackBerry Classic Is One of the Best Phones of 2009 · · Score: 2

    The minute Microsoft made Activesync sufficiently robust, BB's cause célèbre evaporated.

  8. Re:RIM still off in their own little la-la land. on Review: The BlackBerry Classic Is One of the Best Phones of 2009 · · Score: 1

    Remember when RIM opened up its network so the Saudi and Indian governments could spy on BB users....

  9. Re:RIM still off in their own little la-la land. on Review: The BlackBerry Classic Is One of the Best Phones of 2009 · · Score: 1

    Judging by sales, that group is pretty damned small and it is very questionable that it is large enough to keep the company afloat.

  10. Re:Best of 2009? May be, but we live in 2014. Righ on Review: The BlackBerry Classic Is One of the Best Phones of 2009 · · Score: 2

    Go pump BB's stock somewhere else.

  11. Re:Pitiful on "Team America" Gets Post-Hack Yanking At Alamo Drafthouse, Too · · Score: 0

    Thank goodness a movie like Life of Brian wasn't released in these knee-trembling times.

  12. Re:Home of the Brave on "Team America" Gets Post-Hack Yanking At Alamo Drafthouse, Too · · Score: 2

    I can imagine what is going through the heads of many Korean War vets, that MacArthur should have been allowed to march right into Manchuria.

  13. Re:We're turning into wimps on "Team America" Gets Post-Hack Yanking At Alamo Drafthouse, Too · · Score: 4, Insightful

    North Korea really hasn't even proven it has a missile that reliably reach Japan. The country is a total basket case run by a violent, completely detached dynasty. It represents a significant regional threat, but if it were to ever do anything truly belligerent, China would yank support and the regime would collapse.

    That, to my mind, is the chief threat of North Korea, that when the Kims finally do lose grip, the regime's collapse will be violent for North Koreans and their neighbors.

  14. Re:What are they going to do? on "Team America" Gets Post-Hack Yanking At Alamo Drafthouse, Too · · Score: 2

    Indeed. Of all the groups that make threats against the West, NK seems the one least likely to have the ability or desire to actually attack a Western target. I cannot imagine the fires of hell that would reign down on North Korea should it be demonstrated to be behind mass murders in the United States.

    It boggles my mind that anyone seriously believes North Korea is going to start mounting attacks on North American theaters should they screen this film.

  15. So if some nice upstanding code monkey makes a few changes to, say, OpenSSL, the minute he uploads it to the repository, the Australian police are going to come down on him like a ton of bricks?

    Meanwhile, some batshit crazy Iranian refugee can buy a gun...

  16. Except that in-situ is an English word. It's origins are Latin, but then again, so is a vast amount of the English vocabulary.

    We have these things called dictionaries. Rather than demonstrating intense stupidity, inform yourself first.

    Oh right, this is /., where ignorance is a matter of pride.

  17. Atlas Took A Leak on Australia Moves Toward New Restrictions On Technology Export and Publication · · Score: 1

    What's there to translate? It will always end up being "We own your fucking asses, peons."

  18. Re:Should Allah be translated to God? on Apparent Islamic Terrorism Strikes Sydney · · Score: 1

    This isn't about etymology. It's irrelevant how God and Allah were derived. What's relevant is how they're used today.

    You will find as much consistency in the Islamic world as in the Christian or Jewish worlds. If you look at the Monotheistic Abrahamic faiths, it is the Christian sects that, by and large, are the most deviated from the Old Testament norms; in particular as far as the Trinity goes. The Jewish and Muslim view of God is far closer to a pure monotheism.

    Louis in German is Louis, obviously.

    It's Ludwig, not Louis. Both names have their origins in Old Franconian; in which the name was Chlodowig. They are equivalent, but with various pronunciation changes over the last 1500 or so years. You see, a funny thing happens to words, they evolve in pronunciation and in meaning.

    But the word "allah" is merely the Arabic word for "god", and etymologically is related to similar words in other Semitic languages, including the Hebrew "el". If you're an Arabic Christian, you will use the word "allah" for the same reason. For goodness sakes, mate, the Aramaic word for God is "elah".

  19. The only thing dead here is the mass between your ears.

    The saddest thing about morons is that that they think their moronic nature is a matter of pride, and not shame.

  20. Re:Should Allah be translated to God? on Apparent Islamic Terrorism Strikes Sydney · · Score: 0

    Etymology isn't your strong suit, nor logic, nor much else.

    BTW, what is Louis in German?

  21. Re:enoughof this bullshit aready on Possible Dark Matter Signal Spotted · · Score: 1

    Says AC so inept that he cannot begin a sentence with a capitalized word, actually spell "dark matter" or end his sentence with a period.

    Not to mention it's a bloody AC who has indicated no level of expertise in physics or cosmology.

  22. Re:Shocking! on Hollywood's Secret War With Google · · Score: 2

    Actually what I find most awful about CSI shows is the notion that police investigations are akin to unbeatable magical formulas. If investigators zero in on a suspect, almost inevitably that suspect is guilty, and found to be so by incredible technologies used by beautiful people in sci-fi like laboratories. Even in slightly more realistic portrayals of criminal investigations, like the original Law And Order, seldom is the accused actually innocent, but rather he or she manages to elude justice through some combination of sloppy police work and prosecutorial errors.

    But even worse than all those cop and CSI dramas to my mind are the police investigation news magazines like 48 hours, where the police zero in on a suspect, arrest him, and the prosecutors successfully see the accused right through conviction. They usually pay lip service to the notion of the presumption of innocence by allowing the inevitably evil convict to assert "I'm innocent!", though with a weary and bemused postscript by the narrator indicating that justice was done, the cops always get their man, and the DA is godlike in his or her ability to convince a jury of guilt.

  23. Re:Shocking! on Hollywood's Secret War With Google · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think you're confusing the actors and directors with the studios. Those groups have very often been very liberal, but the studio heads care only about money, and they will cozy up with anyone they think has it, and attack anyone who dares threaten it. If real fascists took over the United States tomorrow, Hollywood would quite happily begin producing films supporting that ideology. Essentially, the heads of the big studios are soulless accountants and lawyers.

  24. Re:Riiiiight. on Ford Ditches Microsoft Partnership On Sync, Goes With QNX · · Score: 1

    If quality was the primary determinant in operating system choice, we'd be running OS/2 version 9 right now. Sometimes OSs have momentum, and vxWorks has a helluva lot of developers.

    I'm not bashing QNX, but the fact is that the Blackberry faithful seem to have some sort of idea that QNX is some sort of dominant RTOS that dwarfs all others. It feeds into their bizarre religious need to have everyone believe that BB is going to make a comeback any day now.

  25. Re:What, what? Something's wrong here. on Possible Dark Matter Signal Spotted · · Score: 3, Funny

    By now you must know the denizens of /. are leading lights in fields as diverse as biology, geology, climatology, economics and physics. It's a goddamned wonder that half the posters here don't have Nobel prizes in their back pockets.

    And yet, generous souls that they are, they still have time to complain about Ruby on Rails. We truly live in an age of giants!