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User: GroeFaZ

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Comments · 343

  1. Anything from someone who is better at it than you on Slashdot Asks: What Are Some Insults No Developer Wants To Hear? (infoworld.com) · · Score: 1

    Because there is a high chance they're right.

  2. Re:the problem on Human Go Champion 'Speechless' After 2nd Loss To Machine (phys.org) · · Score: 1

    Remove their raw processing power advantage, and they're nothing more than children with a cheat book.

    What do you think would happen if you did the same to a chess player and took away his/her brain power in the same way? Personally, I suspect that such a player would instead go to slashdot and start posting mindless, bio-chauvinistic drivel.

  3. Re:Wankers! on Pakistan Orders ISPs To Block Over 400k Porn Websites (independent.co.uk) · · Score: 1

    Agreed, I have to check the list for false positives.

  4. Good thing /. has editors, otherwise every shmuck could post anything he wants, without regard to basics like complete sentences.

  5. Re:I misunderstood on Hype In Science Papers On the Rise (nature.com) · · Score: 1

    Scientific language has its own vacoabulary, and in an ideal world, words like the ones the study investigates should never show up, no matter how long the text is. As a scientist, you should leave it to your peers to decide what is novel, amazing, etc., but apparently, pure content is no longer sufficient to get published.

  6. Re:Freedom of Speech on Vandals Deface Facebook's Hamburg Offices (google.com) · · Score: 1

    Unrestricted free speech in the US? SInce when? Seems worth checking out. Regressive govt's in Europe always get on my case when I tweet stuff like "going to shoot up work tomorrow", "going to teach these refugees a lesson - get your bomb dogs!", or something. The USA would never send a SWAT team to me for that. It's only speech, after all!

  7. Re:A bit of history on Germany Won't Prosecute NSA, But Bloggers · · Score: 2

    They know exactly who the real culprits are, and they have zero interest in prosecuting them. The federal prosecutors ARE under direct control of the government. If the government wants to or does not want to prosecute someone, the prosecutors cannot go against that will.

  8. Re:Won't or can't? on Germany Won't Prosecute NSA, But Bloggers · · Score: 1

    The USA would most likely not allow any of their spies to be questioned, much less extradited for prosecution, because they don't give a damn about international law like that. Whoever from the BND cooperated with the NSA would be liable as well, and at least here, Range could use the full power of the law to go after them. He could determine foreign suspects from documents and order them brought in for questioning the moment they enter Germany. He could at least apply pressure.

    However, considering that federal prosecutors, including Range, are bound by instructions from the ministry of justice (i.e. the government), neither the NSA nor, by extension, the BND or any other of the foreign NSA appendages have to worry about anything in that regard. If that ever changes, it's because the then-current government changes their mind, not because of laws or any nonsense like that.

  9. Re:Mangled IRC joke on Ask Slashdot: Why Is the Caps Lock Key Still So Prominent On Keyboards? · · Score: 2

    http://bash.org/?835030 is what you're looking for.

  10. So it has come to this on NASA Spies Earth-Sized Exoplanet Orbiting Sun-Like Star · · Score: 1

    NSA not content with Earth, extends spying to exoplanets.

  11. Re:Who the fuck would use something like that? on LastPass Reporting a Security Breach, Including Authentication Hashes and Salts · · Score: 1

    Self-reply: Or just use hunter2 for everything, it will show up as ******* for everyone that isn't you.

  12. Re:Who the fuck would use something like that? on LastPass Reporting a Security Breach, Including Authentication Hashes and Salts · · Score: 1

    It is possible to remember an arbitrary number of different, safe passwords. My method is to have one password that is short, but hard, in the meaning of impossible to crack by dictionary attack. Think random letters, numbers, the stuff that is hard to memorize. But it's always the same base password, so you will know it by heart eventually. Assuming the website you use the password on hashes the password, that leaves you vulnerable to lookup/rainbow tables, because the base password should be fairly short, below 10 chars.

    To defeat rainbow tables, I salt that password in a way I don't have to memorize but can easily deduce, for example with the site I'm using the password on. Examples: ReallyHardPasswordSlashdot, ReallyHardPasswordGoogle, ReallyHardPasswordSteam, etc. They all are different and not reusable, their hashes are different, they are (hopefully) long enough to be too long for rainbow tables

  13. Re:It seems a trifle curious... on Glen Greenwald: Don't Trust Anonymous Anti-Snowden Claims · · Score: 1
  14. Re:It seems a trifle curious... on Glen Greenwald: Don't Trust Anonymous Anti-Snowden Claims · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Furthermore, those two stories might well be connected. Why not shift the blame of losing those sensitive data in a hack over to Snowden?

  15. Re:And next on Jewels From an Ethiopian Grave Reveal 2,000-Year-Old Link To Rome · · Score: 2

    So you suggest that the actual researchers are incompetent beyond belief, but you can't be even be bothered to look at the /. summary?

    " that the Romans were trading in Aksum hundreds of years earlier than previously thought"

  16. USA handles industrial espionage THE AMERICAN WAY on US Levels Espionage Charges Against 6 Chinese Nationals · · Score: 2
  17. Re:SubjectsInCommentsAreStupid on US Levels Espionage Charges Against 6 Chinese Nationals · · Score: 1

    It could be argued that the NSA-BND cooperation was a case of outsourcing the espionage activities, so the US really did not do any espionage here, just like the US outsource their manufacturing. The fact that they made the BND spy on their own country's companies is just a little ironic icing on that shit cake.

  18. Re:If I hear "eSport" one more time... on Counter-Strike Finally Gets the League It Deserves · · Score: 3, Informative

    eSports are eSports. They have a different name than "sports" because it's not the same thing. It has a similar name to "sports", because it's a similar thing.

    Regarding cheating: Yes, because real sports, especially the professional/competitive level, is known to be free of cheaters.
    Arguably, eSports cheaters are much easier to catch because by definition, everything is controlled by a computer and most cheaters leave some sort of trace that can be tracked. I'm pretty sure that you will find no physical sport that has as strict an enforcement of anti-cheating rules as even the most lenient/lazy competitive eSports games. Especially at the highest level of play, during tournaments where competitors are physically present, with hardware provided by and players under observation of judges, cheating is practically impossible. Many physical sports would be better off if their tournaments had the same ratio of cheating as eSports.

  19. Re:One small problem on What To Say When the Police Tell You To Stop Filming Them · · Score: 1

    Is it really noteworthy when someone does what they are trained and paid to do? What they even have sworn an oath to do? Neither as an affected individual nor as a concerned citizen am I indifferent to what happens in those .1% of the time, if those .1% can mean someone loses money, their freedom, their health, or their life without justification. Police, whether you or anyone likes it, must be held to a higher standard, because with great power comes great responsibility.

  20. Re:Why? on How the NSA Converts Spoken Words Into Searchable Text · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The difference between WW2 codebreakers and today's NSA and what have you being, of course, that WW2 codebreakers were used against to crack the communications of a defined enemy. So yes, it's perfectly reasonable to object to a practice that considers literally everybody, civilian or not, foreigner or not, to be an enemy.

    As for your claim about lives saved vs. deaths caused: Citation needed. The secret police forces of Nazi Germany, Stasi Germany, Soviet Russia, and countless other dictatorships were certainly not in the business of saving lives. The intelligence agencies of the US and her allied governments are certainly not in the business of saving lives either. They are in the business of target selection for the US drone wars.

  21. Obligatory bash.org on AT&T Bills Elderly Customer $24,298.93 For Landline Dial-Up Service · · Score: 4, Funny

    docsigma2000: jesus christ man
    docsigma2000: my son is sooooooo dead
    c8info: Why?
    docsigma2000: hes been looking at internet web sites in fucking EUROPE
    docsigma2000: HE IS SURFING LONG DISTANCE
    docsigma2000: our fucking phone bill is gonna be nuts
    c8info: Ooh, this is bad. Surfing long distance adds an extra $69.99 to your bill per hour.
    docsigma2000: ...!!!!!! FUCK FUCK FUCK
    docsigma2000: is there some plan we can sign up for???
    docsigma2000: cuz theres some cool stuff in europe, but i dun wanna pauy that much
    c8info: Sorry, no. There is no plan. you'll have to live with it.
    docsigma2000: o well, i ccan live without europe intenet sites.
    docsigma2000: but till i figure out how to block it hes sooooo dead
    c8info: By the way, I'm from Europe, your chatting long distance.
    ** docsigma2000 has quit (Connection reset by peer)

  22. Show the 64% the dick pics interview on Except For Millennials, Most Americans Dislike Snowden · · Score: 2

    Problem solved.

  23. Neither must we on How Security Companies Peddle Snake Oil · · Score: 1

    Our enemies are innovative and resourceful, and so are we. They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we.

  24. Re:Pointing out the stark, bleeding obvious... on France Decrees New Rooftops Must Be Covered In Plants Or Solar Panels · · Score: 1

    It is NOT bleedingly obvious. For once, the dropoff was much sharper than a normal sunset. Also, it came at a time of peak solar power production, early afternoon on a clear, sunny spring day. Real preparations and plans had to be made. If that makes it easier for the IT crowd to understand, compare it to the Y2K bug. The reason why nothing major happened back then was not because the threat was exaggerated, but because actual code fixing has happened.

  25. Re:I'm no Seleneologist but.... on Billionaire Teams Up With NASA To Mine the Moon · · Score: 1

    If we will ever have large-scale use for Helium 3, it will be for power generation. In which case synthesizing it would make it merely a form of energy storage like hydrogen.