Comment Re:WTF (Score 2, Insightful) 709
Way to selectively quote the part that wasn't being responded to. Good show.
Way to selectively quote the part that wasn't being responded to. Good show.
It's more like yelling at your neighbor across the street, and then getting upset when someone driving by overhears it. With unencrypted traffic on a wireless network you are quite literally broadcasting information to the world. The argument that someone is the intended recipient and everyone else needs to pretend they didn't hear it is bullshit.
Something like this? http://www.mindhacks.com/blog/2010/06/mickeys_amphetamine.html
Yeah, because "all plastics are bad" is totally what I said.
...he says, taking a long drink from his plastic water bottle.
I don't disagree with you, but I strongly suspect this will be one of those times that it really would have been worth it to take precautions.
I'd rather see them be makers than consumers.
Can't speak for everyone, of course, but some of us enjoy consuming in the evening because we spend the whole day making.
How do you anonymously receive mail?
Sure, but by the time you've got users running scripts or installers locally you've already won. No need to also trick them into using a fake web page when you could just be logging their keys on the real page.
Just a guess, but maybe the part where he said "Then use the corn for ethanol!"?
It's not finding out that the guy is a douche that would get him in trouble; it's going on Facebook in the first place. It would be like asking "What do you like to do on Sunday mornings?" in an interview--it's something that could reveal the applicant's membership in a protected class, and the interviewer should reasonably be aware that it could reveal the applicant's membership in a protected class.
This wouldn't justify an EEOC complaint in itself, but it's another data point that could be used to show a trend.
That's ammo for an EEOC complaint, right there.
It could be a random number base64 encoded.
And furthermore, it's actually less expensive to buy a Newsday print subscription than it is to get just the electronic access, so the article could really be rephrased as "Thirty-five people pay extra to not get a real newspaper."
The rule on staying alive as a program manager is to give 'em a number or give 'em a date, but never give 'em both at once.