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User: Firehed

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Comments · 3,347

  1. Re:Spot the obvious problem on EFF Spinoff Pools Donor Dollars To Prevent WikiLeaks-Style Payment Blockades · · Score: 1

    They're private companies; they have every right in the world to restrict who they do business with - just as not anyone can walk into a bank and get a loan with equal terms for equal amounts, not everyone can get a merchant account to process credit card payments.

    The only thing it would take government intervention to legally stop would be cash donations. And given that the summary suggests the organization is more or less performing money laundering, that's a relatively likely outcome.

  2. Re:Happens everywhere on Baltimore Issued Speed Camera Ticket To Motionless Car · · Score: 1

    Only in TV shows. In real life, that's tampering with a crime scene.

  3. Re:Unauthorized export resale? on New Hampshire Cops Use Taser On Woman Buying Too Many iPhones · · Score: 1

    Sure, but that's not relevant. Apple is not a government bureau; they have a right to reserve service to anyone. They exercised that right, then called the police when the person refused to exit the store (which is then trespass). After that point, any misconduct on either side would have been from either the police or the woman (or both).

  4. Re:Long live DRM! on Nintendo Puts a Bedtime On Wii U Content In Europe · · Score: 2

    This isn't DRM, this is just having really weird store hours.

  5. It does, but you can still sue for damages.

    Either way, sounds like Not News to me. The fact that it's based on a Yelp review rather than a sign tacked up somewhere doesn't change the nature of the case.

  6. Re:I am having a vision of the future... on Researchers Create New Cheap, Shatterproof, Plastic Light Bulbs · · Score: 2

    Sounds like you've never fired a gun when you weren't holding it correctly. It's easy to do some nasty damage to your wrist or shoulder by simply having a bad grip. You can also get some fun burns if hit by a spent shell being ejected, depending on the size of the round.

    Doesn't compare to what the other end of the thing can do, but still... they're pretty dangerous from every angle.

  7. Summary wrong on Unresolved Issues Swirl Around Securing Mobile Payments · · Score: 1

    From TFS:

    These technologies tend to fall through the cracks even in terms of card-present or card-not-present

    The only way to perform a card-present transaction and get the better discount rates and lower fraud liability is to provide the magnetic strip data. Anything typed in is considered card-not-present, even when you type it in when the card is in your hand (otherwise merchants would just lie and get the better rates).

    What this brings about is the question of how merchants are verified as the line between consumer and merchant is blurred... there's no significant change in how things are actually processed behind the scenes, no matter how pretty the UI. It's a bunch of cryptic nonsense based on IBM mainframes from the '70s. Ever seen the integration spec on one of those bad boys? It's nasty - to the point where going truly direct requires a PCI-certified dial-up modem or dedicated leased line installed in your locked cage in your datacenter. Thought using a SOAP API sucks? Try translating your ASCII to EBCDIC before sending it over protocols that predate TCP/IP.

  8. Re:Fair enough I suppose on UW Imposes 20-Tweet Limit On Live Events · · Score: 1

    Tech rumor sites seem to handle this fairly well by simply having a second twitter handle from which they do the live-tweeting of event coverage. If you only want normal news, just follow the main feed; if you want a deluge of pithy comments, follow both. Opt-in spam.

    Sounds like the sportscaster crew could learn a thing or two about this "internet".

  9. Re:7000 more needed for a response on Secession Petitions Flood White House Website · · Score: 1

    To be fair, I'd take the whitehouse.gov petition route knowing that information, simply due to the increased visibility. There's no state-level equivalent AFAIK, and bringing awareness to the issue (ridiculous or not) is still of benefit.

    "The White House responded to over 25,000 petitioners" is a lot catcher than "a couple of people emailed their senators, then posted about it on Facebook".

  10. Free mobile version is free on Blizzard Sued Over Battle.net Authentication · · Score: 2

    Like TFS says, the mobile version is free. Just another moron trying to make a quick buck.

    My concern with blizzard's authenticator is that they seem to have rolled their own implementation rather than adhering to an open, defined spec (HOTP/TOTP). And like so many of these services, there's no good way to move it to a new device without disabling 2FA temporarily. People do upgrade their phones, after all.

  11. Re:What am i missing? on New Credit Card Includes Display and Keypad · · Score: 1

    Magnetic strip data contains different information than what's read off the card; it effectively replaces the CVN for swiped card-present transactions. The issuing bank goes through a different (though functionally equivalent) routine to authorize the payment when they're sent PAN/CVN/exp instead of the raw track data.

  12. Re:What am i missing? on New Credit Card Includes Display and Keypad · · Score: 1

    Actually, that's simply because it's against PCI regulation to store the CVN.

    Most companies don't realize that asking for it on subsequent transactions is pointless so long as you ask for it the first time: you can still prove (with reasonable certainty) the customer had the card in-hand at some point; i.e. it wasn't bought from a Russian warez site.

    In practice that's not true at all, but since when do theory and practice ever overlap?

  13. Re:What am i missing? on New Credit Card Includes Display and Keypad · · Score: 1

    It's not required in order to make the transaction (nor, technically, is anything other than the account number; however, your interchange costs increase and your ability to fight chargebacks decrease by providing less information).

  14. Re:Why should a bank care where and how I spend ?? on Bank Puts a Billion Transaction Records Behind Analytics Site · · Score: 2

    Two words: fraud detection.

  15. Re:Dead giveaway on Cisco VP To Memo Leaker: Finding You Now 'My Hobby' · · Score: 2

    Or just ask a bunch of random coworkers to forward it to you, citing that you missed/deleted the original and want to make sure you have a copy. Tweak based on the variances you discover.

  16. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. on EFF Sues to Block New Internet Sex-Offender Law · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People caught peeing in a bush are treated the same as child molesters under this law. It also includes people that in any way benefit from solicited sex, including the family of people willingly involved in the sex trade.

    Violent offenders are already incarcerated, and those that have been released from prison after serving their time are still pretty closely monitored. This proposition sought to make a crime "more illegal" in order to increase the government's authority. The weasel-wording of the bill's description ("increase penalties for sex trafficking") allowed that to get through with an overwhelming majority; suffice to say, I'm not impressed.

  17. Yup. on Amazon Charges Sales Tax On "Shipping and Handling" · · Score: 1

    This is the correct behavior (in most states). Hate it? Me too. Bitch at your local government person.

  18. Re:Question: on Massachusetts May Soon Change How the Nation Dies · · Score: 2

    I imagine this allows ill patients to get access to something that will bring a much cleaner and painless death than downing an entire bottle of painkillers; i.e. more like a cyanide capsule.

    It's easy to buy a lethal dose of caffeine (fairly cheap!) off Amazon, but going by how having way too much coffee feels, that would be a pretty crappy way to off oneself. Seems to go against that whole "dignity" thing they're aiming for.

  19. Re:cool on Self-Driving Car Faces Off Against Pro On Thunderhill Racetrack · · Score: 2

    The TED talk has a few clips.

  20. Re:Why block them? on Stolen Cellphone Databases Switched On In US · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unsubsidized smartphones easily cost $600+, which constitutes grand larceny (often a felony) in most states.

    I agree that the current holder of the device is probably not the person who stole it, but over a few data points it probably wouldn't be terribly difficult (yet) to track it back to the original thief, what with everything being location-aware these days. That said, you're right - if we just shut the devices off immediately, the desire to steal phones should drop to nearly zero overnight.

  21. Re:No LTE, less space than a nomad on Google's Nexus 4, 7, 10 Strategy: Openness At All Costs · · Score: 2

    Do you actually carry multiple batteries?

    Serious question. I hear people gripe about this all the time, but I don't know ANYONE who actually carries extra batteries. I only hear of people either carrying a charging cable or asking to borrow one.

    If would be awesome if they made a phone where the battery was hot-swappable and cartridge based so I do not need to turn off the phone or remove the back cover to get to replace the battery.

    So, you *actually* want a phone that gets better battery life.

  22. Re:Dude. It's your fault on Is Silicon Valley Morally Bankrupt and Toxic? · · Score: 2

    I think the heart of it stems from the fact that even non-users are affected by this kind of thing - at least unless they go massively out of their way to avoid it. Look at the opposition and non-adoption of the DNT header, to actively* express that you do not want to be tracked by these companies. They just don't care about the human side of things if there's money to be made.

    But at the same time, it's like the banking crisis. In theory, a single business going under should only hurt its direct customers. There's going to be some ripple effect in there, but what we see today is far beyond what anyone would have expected. There's now so much interdependency between these companies that one doing something stupid affects half the world.

    However I don't blame SV for this. It's just a lot more prominent because there's so much (largely stupid and pointless) tech coming out of here. Give it a couple years now that we're no longer throwing $2m at a random college kid with no business model and aspirations of ten million users and you'll see it die off quite a bit (VCs are, it seems, finally looking at the business side of things again before investing). It was happening in NY and Boston too, just not nearly to the same degree since those investors weren't all high on recent tech IPOs.

    * Yes, fuck you IE10 for not understanding the concept of "actively". Even when you're using new tech, you somehow manage to still screw it up for everyone.

  23. Re:Er... lots are normally plowed on Canadian Researchers Create Wireless Charger For Electric Cars · · Score: 1

    Plows scrape the asphalt pretty aggressively precisely to remove layers of ice - a significant factor as to why roads in colder climates need to be repaired quite frequently.

  24. Re:duh on Feds Continue To Consider Linux Users Criminals For Watching DVDs · · Score: 1

    Sure, but that doesn't mean someone legally allowed to fill the market must do so. There's a huge market for $1000 Ferraris, but you don't see them rushing to fill it.

  25. Re:duh on Feds Continue To Consider Linux Users Criminals For Watching DVDs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, that's technically true.

    However, that's only illegal because we invented "better" laws to make something that was already illegal (unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material) "more" illegal (breaking the encryption used to prevent the former).

    Politicians need to stop rejecting these "we need better tools" lobbyist-created laws and tell them to use the perfectly valid tools they already have in place. I know this will never happen, but wishful thinking. Being illegal - in terms of the letter of the law - is a pretty binary thing. I think content producers should have every right to sue people for distributing their material, but we don't need to give them stuff to make gumming up the legal system with their stuff any easier.

    It's like the arguments claiming that it would be legal to drive high if we legalized marijuana: of course it's not - that's both a DUI* and reckless driving. You don't need to add a new law for driving high because it's already illegal under other laws. Distributing copyrighted content that you're not the rights-holder of has been illegal since we introduced copyright, so adding the DMCA** was completely unnecessary.

    * There are slight differences between DWI and DUI, and the meaning varies slightly from state to state. Many places are intentionally vague on the meaning of "under the influence" to (rightly) catch non-alcoholic substances that impair one's ability to safely operate a vehicle.

    ** The law is fundamentally flawed anyway, as it's outlawing a specific implementation of an undesired behavior. It would be like making murder by bludgeoning someone with a lead pipe illegal. Great - I'll just use a knife instead. You're trying to stop the murder, not the misuse of lead pipes. As such, it'll be obsoleted by the next major round of technical advances.