Comment according to cryptocoin news? (Score 1) 548
Come on guys.
Given Wells Fargo is currently accepting these people as customers, I think you need to produce a higher standard of proof before this conspiracy becomes believable.
Come on guys.
Given Wells Fargo is currently accepting these people as customers, I think you need to produce a higher standard of proof before this conspiracy becomes believable.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E...
Although most of these attacks require you be able to clone the data reaped from EMV onto a stripe card and use it in a place that accepts stripe swipes. If the US stops accepting those, it will reduce fraud by presenting less opportunity. But it won't be because EMV prevented data extraction, but because you can't (currently) clone onto an EMV card.
It still has to be swiped in Europe.
You need a Chip and PIN card. Wells Fargo issues them now. And Chase does for some cards too. You really should be getting one of those before you go.
If you don't have the PIN for your card, you don't have a Chip and PIN card and you'll be in a slightly worse boat in Europe than a card that doesn't have a chip because you'll usually have to tell them "ignore that chip, you have to swipe that" every time you use the card.
The terminals that had the problem were their new (few months old) chip and PIN-capable EMV terminals.
Chip and PIN doesn't fix the breach Target had. Only Chip and PIN with tokenization does.
I already have one Chip and PIN card from my bank (US bank) and I'm trying to get my other one switched too. But it doesn't fix this problem.
Target, if you replace your terminals again, please get ones that do Chip and PIN and also NFC and PIN please?
Sorry, that 2nd number should be $0.027/kWh, not $0.0027. They are getting a 5:1 spread, not a 50:1 spread. My error.
Still, the users are currently getting a huge subsidy, one they would lose if they went to battery storage and off the grid.
So they are not going to go off-grid if their subsidy gets merely slightly smaller.
These customers currently (using OGE, one of the utilities for Oklahoma as an example) get to sell power during the day at $0.14/kWh and buy it back at night at $0.0027/kWh. They are using the grid as a 500% efficient battery.
If they go to using an actual battery, will have to increase the size of their array many times in order to reach the same level of monthly bill reduction they currnetly have. And they have to buy a battery.
The current plan is an enormous subsidy to solar customers. That's why they will stick with it. Even if a fee is tacked on top which reduces their financial advantage it will still be far more financially advantageous than going off-grid.
The utilities were already required by law to buy customers' solar power at full retail price. That eliminated any free market angle right then.
This just modifies the laws.
If you are a huge free market fan, would you agree that removing the regulatory requirements on these utilities and letting them determine what to pay for customer-generated solar power would restore the proper order?
We all know that wouldn't work. With only one way to sell their solar power (through the utility) the utility would just refuse to pay them anything.
'employees perceive managers to be more concerned about how they 'look' from above, and less concerned about how they are viewed by their subordinates. This fosters an unhealthy culture and climate by sending a message to employees that it is more important to focus on how things look from the top than how they actually are down below.'
You don't need to commission an expensive report to find out stuff like this. It's so universal it's seen everywhere.
Heck, Scott Adams who writes Dilbert was employed by Pacific Bell, which is not so completely different than Southern California Edison.
And my Model M is in a box because my boss doesn't like the noise.
I have an assortment of HP calculators. The HP-49G was a disaster, but the 48s were amazing and the 50 has been good enough.
There was a range of really well done clock radios from Sony and others right before people refused to pay good money for clock radios any more. After that clock radios then emphasized cheapness at the expense of quality and durability. It's no wonder shortly thereafter people stopped buying them. Once the devices no longer offered any alternative over using your phone, no price is low enough to make it worth purchasing.
If Obama were questioned on live TV about surveillance practices I would assume his responses were lies too.
But this is not relevant to question of the Putin/Snowden interview.
Putin is under no compunction to tell the truth. And there's no reason to expect he would.
Because extender cables are not allowed under the USB spec anyway.
So making a cable which can be extended easily is counterproductive.
The reason for this is signal integrity.
PURGE COMPLETE.