There is no real Terrorism to speak of, in practical terms. Statistically you have a better chance of being struck by lightning multiple times - or be killed in a random crash with an 18 wheel Deisel, than perishing in a 'terror attack'.
With these real facts, why hasn't the American president lanched a pre-emptive war against Meteorology or Interstate Trucking? Oh yeah these are real hazards, not EMMANUEL GOLDSTEIN.
Paedophiles are real, and probably live withinn 2 miles of your house, if you are an American suburbanite.
Spy transmission chips embedded in tires that can be read REMOTELY while driving.
A secret initiative exists to track all funnel-points on interstates and US borders for car tire ID transponders (RFid chips embedded in the tire).
I hope this guys RFID dumper helps people learn about their car more (if supported scanner is in the AIAG frequency standard range)
Your tires have a passive coil with 64 to 128 bit serial number emitter in them! (AIAG B-11 ADC v3.0) . A particular frequency energizes it enough so that a receiver can read its little ROM. A ROM which in essence is your GUID for your TIRE. Multiple tires do not confuse the readers. Its almost identical to all "FastPass" "SpeedPass" technologies you see on gasoline keychain dongles and commuter windshield sticker-chips. The US gov has secretly started using these chips to track people.
Its kind of like FBI "Taggants" in fertilizer and "Taggants" in Gasoline and Bullets, and Blackpowder. But these car tire transponder Ids are meant to actively track and trace movement of your car.
I am not making this up. Melt down a high end Firestone, or Bridgestone tire and go through the bits near the rim (sometimes at base of tread) and you will locate the transmitter (similar to 'grain of rice' pet ids and Mobile SpeedPass, but not as high tech as the tollbooth based units). Sokymat LOGI 160, and Sokymat LOGI 120 transponder buttons are just SOME of the transponders found in modern high end car tires. The AIAG B-11 Tire tracking standard is now implemented for all 3rd party transponder manufactures [covered below].
It is for QA and to prevent fraud and "car theft", but the US Customs service uses it in Canada to detect people who swap license plates on cars when doing a transport of contraband on a mule vehicle that normally has not logged enough hours across the border. The customs service and FBI do not yet talk about this, and are starting using it soon.
You never heard of it either because nobody moderates on slashdot anymore and this is probably +0 still. It has also never appeared in print before and is very secret.
Californias Fastpass is being upgraded to scan ALL responding car tires in future years upcoming. I-75 may get them next in rural funnel points in Ohio.
The photo of the secret prototype WAS at: http://www.tadiran-telematics.com/products6.html...but the link finally died in July 2004 and the new location does not have a photo of a RFID bridge underpass collector. But does discuss thhe toll booth RFID uses...
but the fact is... YOU PROBABLY ALREADY HAVE A RADIO TRANSPONDER not counting your digital cell phone which is routinely silently pulsed in CA bay area each rush hour morning unless turned off (consult Wired Magazine Expose article). Those data point pulses are used by NSA on occasions.
The us FBI with NRO/NSA blessings, has requested us gov make this tire scanning information as secret as the information regarding all us inkjet printers sold in usa in the last 3 years using "yellow" GUID barcode under dark ink regions to serialize printouts to thwart counterfeiting of 20 dollar bills. (30 to 40 percent of ALL California counterfeiting is done using cheap Epson inkjet printers, most purchased with credit ca
Then install the FREE Windows Software Update Services (WSUS) on it. This becomes your single download point for the patches, and manages a local repository.
Just download 'em once. The other machines will go there - instead of windowsupdate.microsoft.com.
You can even schedule yur own times for retreiving and distributing patches, centrally. It might force you to build a domain, if you don't already have one.
It is encapsulated, with a NULL enc type. You wrapped your packet in another header - like any enc. This one has Keb auth associated with it - and uses RSA/SHA-1 to validate the authentication. There are many more dynamic rules availble to you by policy than 802.1x - which is a simple gatekeeper.
There are issues with some access layer filtering and prioritixation - but not unworkable, depending on your vendor.
QoS will never save your butt from data theft or worm traffic.
You gets some - you loses some. All design and ops issues are a matter of tradeoffs.
BTW: IPsec, x.509 and Kerb5 are engineering standards.
You are prolly correct. I am referring to conducting a secret government, maintaining a 'hidden in plain sight' coup, and directing the operations for the US half of 'a new Pearl Harbor'.
Plame is serious in that regard, but also a footnote on the real crime.
You already took my office/cube away for "progressive" offices with hotel cubes. Now, I gotta do a Seabiscuit impersonation - standing up in "my" stall. Is the lunch room going out for a nosebag, too?
I want a TALL backed stool, and a drafting-style table. Like an old-time mechanical engineer.
VLANs can be a headache too - especially with 802.1x, which requires replacing your existing access layer switches with 802.1x capable ones. You DO get the benefit of integrating your wireless access infrastructure with the copper stuff.
Are yu all/mostly Windows (2000+)?
Look closely at Windows Domain and Server Isolation. It is an IPsec based infrastructure security solution, all managed with existing infrastructure. The IPsec policy agent is on the OS, and policy is easily managed centrally by Active Directory and Group Policy. It really is great - and can interop with other IPsec stacks like Linux and Solaris. The default auth mechanism is Kerberos - but x.509 can be used in parallel for interop. Kerb is dead easy.
If this is even only an 80% solution, it should be explored. There are no hardware costs in most cases, it can be phased in without field visits, and you probably already own it.
I wish that one of the big Linux vendors would do something like this with IPsec and OpenLDAP. We have spent years matching the desktop, when developing advanced infrastructure management is where the winning game has moved.
Iranians!
And Turks, too!
Thank you, Ms. Coulter. You have been uncharacteristicly civil in advocating your position.
Have an Opus Day.
"Well, He sounded like a quail..."
I Soviet America, NSA rules judge!
I wonder how long before the Judge is found dead, "of apparently self-inflicted gunshot wounds"?
Brilliant.
They pull the right strings, and the puppets dance. Nancy (dis)Grace and Bill O'Reilly crap.
I am now officially creeped-out.
That was worse than looking at pictures of clowns.
Which are really states at war.
It's worse.
There is no real Terrorism to speak of, in practical terms. Statistically you have a better chance of being struck by lightning multiple times - or be killed in a random crash with an 18 wheel Deisel, than perishing in a 'terror attack'.
With these real facts, why hasn't the American president lanched a pre-emptive war against Meteorology or Interstate Trucking? Oh yeah these are real hazards, not EMMANUEL GOLDSTEIN.
Paedophiles are real, and probably live withinn 2 miles of your house, if you are an American suburbanite.
http://www.mapsexoffenders.com/
http://www.nationalalertregistry.com/
They don't stop at kiddie pictures.
Trumped up nonsense, generatetd by our "gurdians".
:-)
And the U.S. will have t' do without toothpaste, emulating the dental characteristics that make us in the UK world famous.
Transponders?
:
:
: ...but the link finally died in July 2004 and the new location does not have a photo of a RFID bridge underpass collector. But does discuss thhe toll booth RFID uses...
Spy transmission chips embedded in tires that can be read REMOTELY while driving.
A secret initiative exists to track all funnel-points on interstates and US borders for car tire ID transponders (RFid chips embedded in the tire).
I hope this guys RFID dumper helps people learn about their car more (if supported scanner is in the AIAG frequency standard range)
Your tires have a passive coil with 64 to 128 bit serial number emitter in them! (AIAG B-11 ADC v3.0) . A particular frequency energizes it enough so that a receiver can read its little ROM. A ROM which in essence is your GUID for your TIRE. Multiple tires do not confuse the readers. Its almost identical to all "FastPass" "SpeedPass" technologies you see on gasoline keychain dongles and commuter windshield sticker-chips. The US gov has secretly started using these chips to track people.
Its kind of like FBI "Taggants" in fertilizer and "Taggants" in Gasoline and Bullets, and Blackpowder. But these car tire transponder Ids are meant to actively track and trace movement of your car.
Taggant research papers
http://www.wws.princeton.edu/cgi-bin/byteserv.prl/ ~ota/disk3/1980/8017/801705.PDF
(remove spaces in url from slashcode if needed)
I am not making this up. Melt down a high end Firestone, or Bridgestone tire and go through the bits near the rim (sometimes at base of tread) and you will locate the transmitter (similar to 'grain of rice' pet ids and Mobile SpeedPass, but not as high tech as the tollbooth based units). Sokymat LOGI 160, and Sokymat LOGI 120 transponder buttons are just SOME of the transponders found in modern high end car tires. The AIAG B-11 Tire tracking standard is now implemented for all 3rd party transponder manufactures [covered below].
It is for QA and to prevent fraud and "car theft", but the US Customs service uses it in Canada to detect people who swap license plates on cars when doing a transport of contraband on a mule vehicle that normally has not logged enough hours across the border. The customs service and FBI do not yet talk about this, and are starting using it soon.
Photos of chips before molded deep into tires!
http://www.sokymat.com/sp/applications/tireid.html
You never heard of it either because nobody moderates on slashdot anymore and this is probably +0 still. It has also never appeared in print before and is very secret.
Californias Fastpass is being upgraded to scan ALL responding car tires in future years upcoming. I-75 may get them next in rural funnel points in Ohio.
The photo of the secret prototype WAS at
http://www.tadiran-telematics.com/products6.html
http://www.telematics-wireless.com/site/index1.php ?ln=en&main_id=33
but the fact is... YOU PROBABLY ALREADY HAVE A RADIO TRANSPONDER not counting your digital cell phone which is routinely silently pulsed in CA bay area each rush hour morning unless turned off (consult Wired Magazine Expose article). Those data point pulses are used by NSA on occasions.
The us FBI with NRO/NSA blessings, has requested us gov make this tire scanning information as secret as the information regarding all us inkjet printers sold in usa in the last 3 years using "yellow" GUID barcode under dark ink regions to serialize printouts to thwart counterfeiting of 20 dollar bills. (30 to 40 percent of ALL California counterfeiting is done using cheap Epson inkjet printers, most purchased with credit ca
Visualize Cops Without Guns.
They are successful? They get coopted. Bought out by the billionaries, who want no one on their turf.
This America thing was a good idea - but I think we learned a lot building this one. Why don't we go back, and start it over again?
That is its own punishment!
Suing for this sees unsportsman-like. Kicking a fellow, when he's down, wot?
So as soon as he tells us, we at Microsoft will be able to pass this on to you, too!
Needs re-posting. ;-)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUXnJraKM3k
I thought they has Cloven Hooves!
Then install the FREE Windows Software Update Services (WSUS) on it. This becomes your single download point for the patches, and manages a local repository.
Just download 'em once. The other machines will go there - instead of windowsupdate.microsoft.com.
You can even schedule yur own times for retreiving and distributing patches, centrally. It might force you to build a domain, if you don't already have one.
It is not encrypted.
It is encapsulated, with a NULL enc type. You wrapped your packet in another header - like any enc. This one has Keb auth associated with it - and uses RSA/SHA-1 to validate the authentication. There are many more dynamic rules availble to you by policy than 802.1x - which is a simple gatekeeper.
There are issues with some access layer filtering and prioritixation - but not unworkable, depending on your vendor.
QoS will never save your butt from data theft or worm traffic.
You gets some - you loses some. All design and ops issues are a matter of tradeoffs.
BTW: IPsec, x.509 and Kerb5 are engineering standards.
I mean, with all the Nazi stuff going around these days. It'd be really useful to call a spade a spade!
Clever, that last bit.
IPsec can do similar at layer 3 - if you don't need layer 2 isolation for non-IPsec devices on the same segments.
You are prolly correct. I am referring to conducting a secret government, maintaining a 'hidden in plain sight' coup, and directing the operations for the US half of 'a new Pearl Harbor'.
Plame is serious in that regard, but also a footnote on the real crime.
You already took my office/cube away for "progressive" offices with hotel cubes. Now, I gotta do a Seabiscuit impersonation - standing up in "my" stall. Is the lunch room going out for a nosebag, too?
I want a TALL backed stool, and a drafting-style table. Like an old-time mechanical engineer.
VLANs can be a headache too - especially with 802.1x, which requires replacing your existing access layer switches with 802.1x capable ones. You DO get the benefit of integrating your wireless access infrastructure with the copper stuff.
a rchitectureanddesign/ipsec/default.mspx
Are yu all/mostly Windows (2000+)?
Look closely at Windows Domain and Server Isolation. It is an IPsec based infrastructure security solution, all managed with existing infrastructure. The IPsec policy agent is on the OS, and policy is easily managed centrally by Active Directory and Group Policy. It really is great - and can interop with other IPsec stacks like Linux and Solaris. The default auth mechanism is Kerberos - but x.509 can be used in parallel for interop. Kerb is dead easy.
If this is even only an 80% solution, it should be explored. There are no hardware costs in most cases, it can be phased in without field visits, and you probably already own it.
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/topics/
I wish that one of the big Linux vendors would do something like this with IPsec and OpenLDAP. We have spent years matching the desktop, when developing advanced infrastructure management is where the winning game has moved.