Here in Finland we have a system where the bank sends 80 one-time passwords to the customer along with 18 reusable passwords. To log on into the bank's website you need your customer id with the one-time password. To do anything in the website, eg pay the bills or do a money transfer to another account, you need to accept the transaction with one of the reusable passwords.
When you've reached 60th or so of the passwords the bank sends you a list of the next 80 passwords. I feel it's secure and quite easy to use a system
I don't think drives have anything to do with the discs lasting 5 or more years. According TA the problem is degradation in the disc material. That has nothing to do with the quality of the drive used originally to burn data.
Actually there wasn't any mention about the rootkit in the XCP EULA. Therefore, users did not consent to have malicious programs being installed to their systems.
And in Finland it's even sadder than in US:
Finland: Distributing tools illegal - Circumvention illegal - organised talking about circumvention illegal
You are having it wrong. The properties of the coating are different because of the small scale of the particles it is consisting of, hence nanotechnology.
Nanotechnology involves research and technology development at the atomic, molecular, or macromolecular levels in the dimension range of approximately 1-100 nanometers to provide fundamental understanding of phenomena and materials at the nanoscale and to create and use structures, devices, and systems that have novel properties and functions because of their small and/or intermediate size. The novel and differentiating properties and functions are developed at a critical length scale of matter typically under l00 nm. Nanotechnology research and development includes control at the nanoscale and integration of nanoscale structures into larger material components, systems, and architectures. Within these larger scale assemblies, the control and construction of their structures and components remains at the nanometer scale.
I'm only accepting cookies from few sites and blocking all but google's text ads. I must say that since I started to surf like this, my user experience has improved vastly.
Here in Finland we have a system where the bank sends 80 one-time passwords to the customer along with 18 reusable passwords. To log on into the bank's website you need your customer id with the one-time password. To do anything in the website, eg pay the bills or do a money transfer to another account, you need to accept the transaction with one of the reusable passwords. When you've reached 60th or so of the passwords the bank sends you a list of the next 80 passwords. I feel it's secure and quite easy to use a system
This is the big mistake. You must not say "copyrighted" when you mean "unlicensed".
I don't think drives have anything to do with the discs lasting 5 or more years. According TA the problem is degradation in the disc material. That has nothing to do with the quality of the drive used originally to burn data.
Actually there wasn't any mention about the rootkit in the XCP EULA. Therefore, users did not consent to have malicious programs being installed to their systems.
Civil disobedience I guess.. :)
And in Finland it's even sadder than in US:
Finland: Distributing tools illegal - Circumvention illegal - organised talking about circumvention illegal
TiO2 also has a wonderful property to be self-cleaning (ie. break organic molecules off the surface) in presence of UV
You are having it wrong. The properties of the coating are different because of the small scale of the particles it is consisting of, hence nanotechnology.
The definition of nanotechnology as US government thinks it:I'm only accepting cookies from few sites and blocking all but google's text ads. I must say that since I started to surf like this, my user experience has improved vastly.
It's called Borsch or something like that.
If you RTFA, you'll notice that they do use grain: