You can check if you've been scanned for exploitable CGIs using something like (adjust apache logs path accordingly):
grep cgi
Thanks for the nice grep work - found one attempt to get my box to rat itself out via ping:
/var/log/apache2/access.log:89.207.135.125 - - [25/Sep/2014:03:52:14 -0500] "GET
Fortunately I was patched several hours prior to that.
Would there be any way for that probe to execute against a static 404 page - no cgi executing?
yep:
Like Lynx and Caracals.
obligatory xkcd: http://xkcd.com/1056/
Algorithms are not AI. Everything you describe is simply a matter of following a human-generated set of instructions. That is not AI.
Algorithms are not AI. Everything you describe is simply a matter of following a human-generated set of instructions. That is not AI.
no, the difference is Big Data. Before "Big Data", machine translation, self-driving vehicles, chess, etc. were problems that were attempted to be solved by algorithms written by humans. These kinds of algorithms would be full of heuristics such as "if you are in situation X, perform behavior Y". This led to fragile, clunky code. Nowadays, with Big Data, the algorithms are more like, "see what everybody else is doing in situations similar to X"
tech.slashdot.org/story/01/05/17/1452217/scaling-walls-with-suction-cups
It would be nice if they had some sort of code review in place for this sort of stuff. However, this isn't a paid project, so the developers writing this are doing arguably the best they can.
The code was reviewed. The commit log shows that the reviewer was Stephen Henson (thanks to slashdot user grub for pointing this out.)
Personally I wish we'd just man up and shoot the appropriate organisms into Venus' atmosphere to start the terraforming process.
Because breathable Earth-normal atmosphere is a lifting gas on Venus, we could make a relatively low budget colony without any terraforming. Just send a big balloon. It could ride the relatively stable upper atmospheric winds on Venus, circling the planet every 4 earth days, and be at standard pressure, so any hull breach would not result in explosive decompression.
The Internet Archive says that it subscribes to the The Oakland Archive Policy which for |requests by governments" says:
Archivists will exercise best-efforts compliance with applicable court orders Beyond that, as noted in the Library Bill of Rights, 'Libraries should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of their responsibility to provide information and enlightenment.'
Seems like this may just have slipped past them. Let's make sure they know they need to sort it out... Surely they only removed it from the Wayback Machine, not from the archive itself.
That's actually a really good point. I wonder if there's any justification in the Policy for retroactively removing content based on current robots.txt
Not much of an archive if they delete the past because someone says it should be deleted. Even Wikipedia allows you to go back and see all changes to an article.
except for page deletion. In that case, only certain people can view the history.
Enders Game could be the best movie ever, Orson Scott Card is not getting a dime of my money.
That's true whether or not you watch the film, due to the nature of his option-only (no royalties) contract.
Life is a healthy respect for mother nature laced with greed.