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Comment Android (Score 4, Informative) 240

I used to test compatability between Chrome, Opera, Firefox, and Internet Explorer, as a desktop browser. But now we have one PC and two phones and a tablet, and Chrome is native on all the mobile devices. That's where Firefox is losing to Chrome. Personally I installed Firefox on my Android Tablet, but Chrome still lurks in the background.

Comment Re:Detector, please (Score 1) 180

Just for reference, just because you have some raspberry pi's running Linux, doesn't really mean you should be saying you run some servers.

Second, if you don't know how to detect this, you shouldn't be running servers.

Third, if you don't know how to prevent this from being useful, OR you don't take those actions be default, you shouldn't be running anything other than Windows.

The server brand names I'm not sure of; generic 80386 boxes. They are owned by a company I work for. I set up these machines myself; they paid me for it. Two are in Bangkok, Thailand, the other one is 1000 kilometers North of there. Plus my own Lenovo notebook. They run information management software what I wrote, plus the OS and Apache and MySQL of course. I update all four every weekend using apt via ssh. Other than outgoing connections to certain IP addresses, I saw nothing in the paper that showed how to detect Mumblehard. (PS: You sound very snotty. I did say "Please".)

Comment Detector, please (Score 1) 180

I've got three servers that I maintain; four if you count my workstation. They all run Ubuntu Linux 14.04.

What is top in my mind is DETECTION. How to tell if Mublehard has infected us. If it has I must can go in person and re-install all the systems from scratch. But I'm not going to spend several nights on the bus until I get a YES or NO. Perhaps Yellsoft sells a Mumblehard detector, ha ha?

Comment Re: Excellent. (Score 1) 324

To send e-mail to ThisIdiot@andycanfield.com you have to send it to ThatIdiot@yandex.com. There is no e-mail service at andycanfield.com because all of the worlds SMTP servers are interconnected by mandatory certification.

There there is no e-mail server on my web site. Your e-mail client connects to SMTP.alpha.com and it talks to SMTP.beta.com which talks to SMTP.gamma.com on down the line until the message gets to SMTP.target.com and delivers the message where he can pick up the message from POP3.target.com. All the world's SMTP servers are inconnected by a web of paid-for certificates. Unlike HTTPS, there is no human involved, so nobody can say "Yes, go ahead and accept that certificate". Your certificate is either signed by a recognized organisation, or you're out of the chain.

Comment Re:Excellent. (Score 1) 324

I have my own personal web site. It uses HTTP. Several years ago I looked into upgrading it to HTTPS. No thanks. Why not? Because [a] I had to shell out my own money to by a certificate to vouch for my domain name, and [b] It seemed wrong to me to have somebody else to voucth for me. Maybe Mozilla can solve the first problem. But if you go to my domain name, why do you need anybody else to swear that that really is me? Seems wrong, somehow.

- Andy Canfield
www.andycanfield.com

Ahah! Do you believe what I posted? Did I sign it with my PGP key? Do you believe that this is me typing this? Who will you believe if you don't believe me? Answer: don't trust anybody, including me.

Comment Re:Those idiots couldn't invade Pittsburg! (Score 5, Interesting) 686

I was at U.C. Berkeley in 1968. We forced the US out of Vietnam, we brought down Richard Nixon. We can do it again; we can bring down the US NSA.

How? The same way we did it before - by teaching everyone we meet. What did we teach them in the 1960's? "The government MIGHT be lying to you." Once they learned that, they began thinking and checking, and they saw that very often the government WAS lying. When Richard Nixon denied the accusations, noboty believed him.

What do we need to teach people today? Perhaps it is "The government does not TRUST you." The constitution says that Barack Obama is the boss of the NSA, and that the AMERICAN PEOPLE are the boss of Obama. So how can an organization not trust the boss? Keith Alexander has admitted to Congress that the NSA has lied to the American people, who are his boss. You lie to the boss you get your ass kicked. This posted message is part of that education.

The question is not whether Ed Snowden can get a fair trial. The question is whether Keith Alexander can get a fair trial. So far he hasn't had a trial at all, depite his confession that his agency broke the law.

Comment Those idiots couldn't invade Pittsburg! (Score 3, Interesting) 686

I was at the U.S. Embassy in Laos monday morning. It was a horrible experience. A brand new embassy building staffed with paranoid idiots. When I got home to Thailand I described the experience at
http://www.andycanfield.com/Th...
I may be 66 years old, but Ed Snowden is my hero. He can sleep on my floor any time. He could sleep on my sofa if I had a sofa.

Comment I hate your rules (Score 1) 136

I have a low-security password that I use all over the Internet, like Slashdot. I have a medium security password I use for Linux logins, and a high security password I use for bank accounts. Notice the security reference standard: money.

I hate it when my low-security password is rejected by some ego-driven web site that thinks I should memorize a special password just for them. FYI my low-security password has 7 lower-case letters and one special character in the middle. No digits! If you won't take that, your web site just isn't worh it, and I will not have an account there. Your loss, not mine.

Oh, and my PGP secret key has a 30-40 character passphrase, the first line of a song I made up and used to sing to my daughter, who died in 1994. The passphrase includes capitalization and punctuation, but it's easy for me to rememember. You turkeys who want high-security passwords, why don't you hash a pass phrase?

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