I read that whole article before I visited slashdot this morning, and nowhere does it suggest that WikiLeaks' servers are in those bunkers. The Bunker was a past business venture of Ben Laurie, who designed the encryption methods used by the site. That information is presented to give insight into one of the minds behind the creation of Wikileaks, nothing more. Any connection between the Bunker and Wikileaks is made by the reader, not the author.
For the second story in a row, Slashdot gets it wrong. David Eick said merely that he and Ronald D. Moore "had not decided yet" about the future of the show past season 4, not that there was certainly going to be a season 5.
I know Google has been falling out of favour with the/. crowd of late, but I think they really deserve some big kudos on this matter. If they hadn't stood up to the DoJ on this one, no one would have and this law would still be in place.
Way to not be evil!
The chief source for this story is a disgruntled "informant" inside the googleplex. To this I say: just because one person at google hates his job doesn't mean they're shafting a whole segment of their workforce.
Come back when you have data, not just a data point.
I read that whole article before I visited slashdot this morning, and nowhere does it suggest that WikiLeaks' servers are in those bunkers. The Bunker was a past business venture of Ben Laurie, who designed the encryption methods used by the site. That information is presented to give insight into one of the minds behind the creation of Wikileaks, nothing more. Any connection between the Bunker and Wikileaks is made by the reader, not the author.
For the second story in a row, Slashdot gets it wrong. David Eick said merely that he and Ronald D. Moore "had not decided yet" about the future of the show past season 4, not that there was certainly going to be a season 5.
Someone figured this out a couple months ago, because it happened again in the Ohio state elections. http://toolbar.netcraft.com/site_report?url=http:/ /election.sos.state.oh.us
I know Google has been falling out of favour with the /. crowd of late, but I think they really deserve some big kudos on this matter. If they hadn't stood up to the DoJ on this one, no one would have and this law would still be in place.
Way to not be evil!
The chief source for this story is a disgruntled "informant" inside the googleplex. To this I say: just because one person at google hates his job doesn't mean they're shafting a whole segment of their workforce. Come back when you have data, not just a data point.
I gotta give my vote to Greg Bear. Darwin's Radio and Darwin's Children would be especially appropriate for a biology class.
Excuse me! There are some of us out here who haven't read Civil War yet! Ugh.