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User: Allah

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  1. Isn't this just a light saber? on Curved Laser Beams Could Help Tame Lightning · · Score: 1

    I mean, really, curved light, plasma, lenses, blocks other energy possibly other energy weapons. It's a jedi's weapon .....

  2. As long as they don't "Dragon of the Lance" it on Multiple Upcoming Games, Movies Based On Jordan's Wheel of Time · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As long as they don't "animize" it like they did the new Dragon of the Lance animation movie. BLECH!

  3. What project management software does he use? on Obama Launches Change.gov · · Score: 1

    I wonder.

  4. Re:Yes, but the article doesn't address a few ques on $208 Million Petascale Computer Gets Green Light · · Score: 1

    It will not run 32 bit linux, so of course, the admins in charge are going to bitch about the lack of adobe flash support.

    They can run adobe flash enabled apps in a virtual machine (shrugs)

  5. and at 10 cents/MB tran$fered, you will be broke.. on Siemens Develops 1 gbit/sec Wireless Link · · Score: 1

    you will already be out of 100 dollars in
    on second...................

  6. You mean it's been REALLY defaced now.... on SCO.com Defaced · · Score: 1

    it has "original" content now................

  7. Isn't Ashcroft a shriner? on College Freshman Builds Fusion Reactor · · Score: 1

    he prays to me in lodge meetings..........

  8. Energy input vs. Energy output on College Freshman Builds Fusion Reactor · · Score: 0

    greater than or less than? Or is this another
    "tv show???????????????????"
    If this is just another hoax, how did it make the
    first page here?

  9. In other news..... on Windows Is 'Insecure By Design,' Says Washington Post · · Score: 1

    researchers have discovered that the atmosphere
    refracts most of the white light of the sun
    into the blue frequencies......

  10. SCO has proven publicly they violated the BSD lic on Embarrassing Dispatches From The SCO Front · · Score: 1

    TOUCH DOWN!
    NOTRE DAME!

  11. It depends on which kernel they used on Supercomputer Breaks the $100/GFLOPS Barrier · · Score: 1

    the older kernels, they are SCOless......

  12. what about this secondary attact on 8/22 on SoBig: Worst is Yet to Come · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://tinyurl.com/ku3u

    August 22, 2003 07:38 AM US Eastern Timezone

    A Potentially Massive Internet Attack Starts Today; Sobig.F Downloads and Executes a Mysterious Program on Friday at 19:00 UTC

    SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 22, 2003--F-Secure Corporation is warning about a new level of attack to be unleashed by the Sobig.F worm today.
    Windows e-mail worm Sobig.F, which is currently the most widespread worm in the world, has created massive e-mail outages globally since it was found on Tuesday the 18th of August -- four days ago. The worm spreads itself via infected e-mail attachments in e-mails with a spoofed sender address. Total amount of infected e-mails seen in the Internet since this attack started is close to 100 million.

    However, the Sobig.F worm has a surprise attack in its sleeve. All the infected computers are entering a second phase today, on Friday the 22nd of August, 2003. These computers are using atom clocks to synchronize the activation to start exactly at the same time around the world: at 19:00:00 UTC (12:00 in San Francisco, 20:00 in London, 05:00 on Saturday in Sydney).

    On this moment, the worm starts to connect to machines found from an encrypted list hidden in the virus body. The list contains the address of 20 computers located in USA, Canada and South Korea.

    "These 20 machines seem to be typical home PCs, connected to the Internet with always-on DSL connections," says Mikko Hypponen, Director of Anti-Virus Research at F-Secure. "Most likely the party behind Sobig.F has broken into these computers and they are now being misused to be part of this attack."

    The worm connects to one of these 20 servers and authenticates itself with a secret 8-byte code. The servers respond with a web address. Infected machines download a program from this address -- and run it. At this moment it is completely unknown what this mystery program will do.

    F-Secure has been able to break into this system and crack the encryption, but currently the web address sent by the servers doesn't go anywhere. "The developers of the virus know that we could download the program beforehand, analyse it and come up with countermeasures," says Hypponen. "So apparently their plan is to change the web address to point to the correct address or addresses just seconds before the deadline. By the time we get a copy of the file, the infected computers have already downloaded and run it."

    Right now, nobody knows what this program does. It could do damage, like deleting files or unleash network attacks. Earlier versions of Sobig have executed similar but simpler routines. With Sobig.E, the worm downloaded a program which removed the virus itself (to hide its tracks), and then started to steal users network and web passwords. After this the worm installed a hidden email proxy, which has been used by various spammers to send their bulk commercial emails through these machines without the owners of the computers knowing anything about it. Sobig.F might do something similar -- but we won't know until 19:00 UTC today.

    "As soon as we were able to crack the encryption used by the worm to hide the list of the 20 machines, we've been trying to close them down," explains Mikko Hypponen. F-Secure has been working with officials, authorities and various CERT organizations to disconnect these machines from the Internet. "Unfortunately, the writers of this virus have been waiting for this move too." These 20 machines are chosen from the networks of different operators, making it quite likely that there won't be enough time to take them all down by 19:00 UTC. Even if just one stays up, it will be enough for the worm.

    The advanced techniques used by the worm make it quite obvious it's not written by a typical teenage virus writer. The fact that previous Sobig variants we're used by spammers on a large scale adds an element of financial gain. Who's behind all this? "Looks like organized crime to me," comments Mikko Hypponen.

    F-Secure is monitoring the

  13. "Like almost everyone, I receive a lot of spam .." on Microsoft Steps Up Anti-Spam Efforts · · Score: 1

    Bill Gates wrote:

    "Like almost everyone, I receive a lot of spam every day, much of it offering to help me get out of debt or get rich quick."

    This has got to be the funniest thing I have
    read this week. As if Bill needs to "get out
    of debt" or "get rich quick."