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User: Pichu0102

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  1. The elephant in the room is VAC on Steam Stealer Malware Becomes Extremely Sophisticated, Remains Very Cheap (securelist.com) · · Score: 1

    And this is where Valve's stance on VAC being zero tolerance, permanent, and in place regardless of if your account was hijacked or not needs to be addressed. You get a VAC ban, you're not going to be able to participate in the Steam community or any online game in any fashion without being harassed endlessly, or repurchasing all games on a new account. Seen it time and time again even if VAC is not relevant to whatever discussion is at hand. I can only hope that with all the security I've set up on my Steam account, it never gets hijacked and exploits to get around all that are never found, as I'd never be able to afford to repurchase all my games on a new account.

  2. Re:What should happen but won't on US Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia Has Died (theguardian.com) · · Score: 2

    "This Court has never held that the Constitution forbids the execution of a convicted defendant who has had a full and fair trial but is later able to convince a habeas court that he is 'actually' innocent," Scalia wrote in a 2009 dissent of the Court's order for a federal trial court in Georgia to consider the case of death row inmate Troy Davis. "Quite to the contrary, we have repeatedly left that question unresolved, while expressing considerable doubt that any claim based on alleged 'actual innocence' is constitutionally cognizable."

    Source - Business Insider.

    So, no, you'll have to forgive a lot of people who can't say anything nice about a person who said this.

  3. Re: Versioning on Inside Cryptowall 2.0 Ransomware · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In theory, it could stop the Crashplan service, manually edit your backup set settings to have no versioning, and no deleted file keeping, restart the Crashplan service, and let it run through and prune all the files it thinks it should be pruning, then encrypt your files, let it back them up, and Crashplan dutifully prunes the old versions like the hijacked config file says to.

  4. Re: Versioning on Inside Cryptowall 2.0 Ransomware · · Score: 2

    I can confirm it does not.

  5. Re:Versioning on Inside Cryptowall 2.0 Ransomware · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This works until you realize the ransomware could go into your Crashplan settings and turn off versioning and keeping deleted files.

  6. Re:The time-honored tradition of... on Workers On Autism Spectrum Finding Careers In Software Testing · · Score: 1

    As someone diagnosed with Aspergers/ASD, I would rather be rid of this disorder. It has not been kind to my life, and the disadvantages far outweigh any advantages. No soft skills means your other skills are much more difficult to use and made much less useful since you can't interact with others.
    Obviously, vaccines don't cause autism, but I would like a cure to see what it's like to not have a meltdown every other social interaction. It is not a good way to live.

  7. Sounds like hands-on training on At CIA Starbucks, Even the Baristas Are Covert · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's to give undercover agents in training some semi-real-world experience with giving false names with confidence?

  8. Re:How many of you are still using Gnome? on Debian Switching Back To GNOME As the Default Desktop · · Score: 2

    You're in luck then, Debian is still way back in the days when GNOME 2 was new!

  9. Re:Its all in the gmail terms of use ... on Google Spots Explicit Images of a Child In Man's Email, Tips Off Police · · Score: 1

    My guess is the file hash matched a known file that contained the offending material. Google does scan your email for virii, so it's not unthinkable that images, a possible threat vector, are also scanned and hashed, and can be compared to a database of offending image hashes as well as virii.

  10. Weighted but with no pills? on Robbery Suspect Tracked By GPS and Killed · · Score: 1

    Er, wouldn't it be easier to put sugar pills in the bottles that have the appearance of pain medication? If a robber wises up and checks in the bottle before leaving and sees nothing, that pharmacist is going to be in trouble.

  11. Re:Crashplan on How Do You Backup 20TB of Data? · · Score: 1

    I agree with this. In addition, you can also backup to local folders, and have different backup sets so the really big stuff will be backed up online, but the smaller, more important things can be backed up both to a folder and online. That, and they let you control frequency of backups, and never delete anything unless you set it to remove deleted files after whatever period of time you say. Lord knows how many TB I have backed up there that is just deleted files and their daily versions.

  12. Re:Use public DNS on How One Man Fought His ISP's Bad Behavior and Won · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Downside of using shared DNS servers is that some servers, like those for Sony's PSN, try to get you to download from servers based on your DNS server.

    Why? I have no clue. However, it kills your connection speed until you reset it to your local ISP's DNS servers. Be wary.

  13. Re:user acceptance? on BitTorrent Unveils Secure Chat To Counter 'NSA Dragnet Surveillance' · · Score: 1

    If it behaves anything like Retroshare, it would have the users exchange keys, and not let them connect until each has the other's keys and allows the connection. Nintendo online players have been doing something similar for a while with friend codes, so I don't see why this needs to be so difficult.

  14. Re:They have *worse* to hide? on NSA Has No Clue As To Scope of Snowden's Data Trove · · Score: 1

    The problem is his data may also info about legitimate foreign spying operations and info on the people involved. While there probably is still more evidence of wrongdoing in what he has, it's also likely he has his hands on something that could very well put a good deal of people's lives in danger. That data was stolen once, right out from under the NSA's noses. If the NSA couldn't stop it from being stolen, how can a single man ensure it won't be stolen from him as well? Remember, this data is very important, and he's as vulnerable as anyone to the $5 wrench decryption attack if he has it encrypted himself.

    So the USA really should try to offer him this, and also offer official protection from other nations who may also be interested in some of the things he's learned. This, of course, all hinges on how many copies of the data he has, and if he's given copies to more than he's told us.

    In any case, I see this deal falling through, and him possibly being forced to hand over a copy of the data to one or more third parties that are not the US, which can only end very, very badly if not handled correctly. Also, the more people handling it, the more likely it will fall into the wrong hands...

  15. Re: Human error on About 25% of HealthCare.gov Applications Have Errors · · Score: 1

    Oh, my mistake then. I was under the impression that the end users filled out forms on the website, and were missing some or incorrectly filling them out, leading to an error.

  16. Re: Human error on About 25% of HealthCare.gov Applications Have Errors · · Score: 1

    Strange, TFA as well as the summary seem to imply that the users are entering faulty information into the forms or failing to enter any information into some forms, and that is what is causing the problems.

  17. Human error on About 25% of HealthCare.gov Applications Have Errors · · Score: -1

    So basically, end user error is now counted as the website's problem? When did this start becoming common practice?

  18. Re: Missing context on Canonical Developer Warns About Banking With Linux Mint · · Score: 1

    Ohh, I think I remember seeing those numbers in the update manager of my Linux Mint VM. Yeah, that makes sense. Although I'm wondering, what do they do about high urgency updates they normally don't do because it breaks things, haven't tested, but still have to be put out to all systems anyways due to whatever, say a major security hole. Where would that fall on the 1 to 5 scale of updates?

  19. Re:Missing context on Canonical Developer Warns About Banking With Linux Mint · · Score: 1

    Am I reading that file incorrectly, or does it list Flash as a package to never update?

  20. Better idea on Time For a Warrant Canary Metatag? · · Score: 1

    For a website about security, have a warrant canary on every user's page when they login. If it disappears, well, there you go. In addition, add a counter that, for every FISA request you get, increments the counter by 2, afterwards which you add 1 to, to get, say "We have not received 255 FISA requests."

  21. Re:Pretty nice long article on P2P Data Not Private, But It Could Be · · Score: 1

    There's a nice program out there called Retroshare that is essentially DC++ with friend to friend encrypted connections, along with a slew of other features. Two people share their PGP public keys with each other, connect, and choose what files they want to share, and with who they want to share them. It's very nice, but not many people I know use it.

  22. Re:The plan on How The NSA Targets Tor · · Score: 1

    For the first, I'd say snipers are watching, with armed people nearby in hiding, possibly in many locations surrounding you watching to see what you do.

    For the second, honeypot.

  23. Re:What is it with plastic? on Apple Unveils iPhone 5C, iPhone 5S · · Score: 1

    False. 4(Cheaper) =/= Cheaper.

  24. Re:Nintendo's taking a lot of flak for this... on Nintendo Announces 2DS Handheld — Plays 3DS Games In 2-D · · Score: 1

    It can be controlled on or off from Parental Controls in the 3DS menu behind a pinlock.

    Nintendo really needs to amp their showing off parental controls thing so people can still buy a nice clamshell portable system for their child that still has 3D disabled.

  25. Re:*yawn* on Internet Infrastructure for Everyone · · Score: 1

    Do you mean having applications run into their own little sandboxes that can be effortlessly moved to any other system running this, as opposed to having to move an entire VM to a new server?