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The Military

Soviets Built a Doomsday Machine; It's Still Alive 638

An anonymous reader points out a story in Wired introducing us to the Doomsday Machine built by the Soviet Union in the 1980s — and that remains active to this day. It was called "Perimeter." The article explains why the device was built, and why the Soviets considered it to be something that kept the peace, even though they never told the US about it. "[Reagan's] strategy worked. Moscow soon believed the new US leadership really was ready to fight a nuclear war. But the Soviets also became convinced that the US was now willing to start a nuclear war. ... A few months later, Reagan... announced that the US was going to develop a shield of lasers and nuclear weapons in space to defend against Soviet warheads. ... To Moscow it was the Death Star — and it confirmed that the US was planning an attack. ... By guaranteeing that Moscow could hit back, Perimeter was actually designed to keep an overeager Soviet military or civilian leader from launching prematurely during a crisis. The point, [an informant] says, was 'to cool down all these hotheads and extremists. No matter what was going to happen, there still would be revenge. Those who attack us will be punished.'"

Comment Re:PS3 is an oddity here (Score 1) 107

I don't know where the "here" in "PS3 is an oddity here" is but in Scandinavia where I live the stats says that the PS3 has sold better than the PS2 in the same timespan after release. And that is even with the competition of the Xbox 360 and the Wii. So maybe the PS3 is in trouble worldwide (citation please?) but surely not everywhere.
Linux Business

GPL Case Against Danish Satellite Provider 297

Rohde writes "The number of satellite and cable boxes on the Danish market using Linux has significantly increased during the last couple of years. The providers Viasat, Yousee and Stofa all provide HD receivers based on Linux, and all of them fail to provide the source code or make customers aware of the fact that the units are based on GPL licensed software. I decided it was time to fix this situation and luckily the Danish legal company BvHD has decided to take the case. We are starting with Viasat, which distributes a Samsung box including middleware and security from NDS, and you can follow the case here."
Editorial

Encryption? What Encryption? 500

Slashdot regular Bennett Haselton writes with his take on the news we discussed early this morning about the UK government's prosecution of two people who refused to disclose their encryption keys: "Is it possible to write a program that enables you to encrypt files without drawing suspicion upon yourself if anyone ever seizes your computer? No; a program by itself, no matter how perfectly written, couldn't do this because you'd still attract suspicion just for possessing the software. You'd need a social element driving the program's popularity until it gets to the point where people no longer look suspicious just for having the program installed. Here are some theories on how that could happen — but it would be a high bar to clear." Hit the link below for the rest of Bennett's thoughts.

Comment Re:Here is a Reason Why the Free Market Works Best (Score 1) 336

If you think we're just going to roll over and give up one of the last great bastions of American manufacturing, you can kiss Barack's patriotic ass.

Americans really are good patriots!

They would rather bring down the whole nations economy and pollute the world than lose some brand to foreigners even though they can't even compete anyways. Bravo! No wonder Americans got the reputations they do - even in nations that are supposed to be their closest allies in wars around the globe.

Did you ever travel out in the world? Sadly most places I have been they dislike Americans because of the few rotten apples you got (Well, I assume it is a minority at least!) that behave as if they own the globe.

Internet Explorer

Submission + - Microsoft Finally Joins HTML 5 Standard (cnet.com)

bonch writes: On Friday, Microsoft posted to a mailing list that IE developers are reviewing the HTML5 standard for future versions of Internet Explorer. Microsoft is dragging its feet, however, saying that they "have more questions than answers" and criticizing many of HTML5's new tags like HEADER, FOOTER, and ASIDE, calling them "arbitrary" or unnecessary. It remains to be seen whether Microsoft waited too long to try to influence basic parts of the spec that most of their competitors have already adopted.
The Internet

Submission + - Egyptian government and ISPs cap all DSL plans 3

egNuKe writes: Nobody can pinpoint when the agreement was penned, but the Egyptian NTRA (National Telecom Regulatory Authority) allowed/ordered All Egyptian ISPs to cap existing and new DSL subscriptions. The new limits haven't been announced publicly and customer support denies that they exist.
Currently, there is no way to get unlimited internet access in Egypt for speeds up to 24 Mbps and the caps vary from 25 GB/Month for 512 Kbps to 250 GB/Month for 24 Mbps.
If you know what you're looking for, you can find a document explaining the new "Fair Use Policy" hidden in most Egyptian ISPs websites. As far as I could tell, the document is the same regardless of the provider. Here is the Link.

Apart from suing the NTRA and ISPs for breach of existing contracts and mass boycotting of internet, what should the egyptian internet users do ?
Programming

Submission + - Open Source That Pays, Possible?

hsoft writes: "I know, I know, this subject has been beaten to death on Slashdot. We all know by now that there are tons of ways to earn money with open source, such as custom development, dual licensing, support, donations or resume building. There's one area of development, however, where it seems that "free and in speech" usually implies "free as in beer": generic, wide-audience software (shareware).

I wrote an article in which I try to find a way to open the source code of my applications without losing my income. I propose an hybrid license which we could call "delayed open source". For a limited time (2 years), the users are restricted on what they can do with the source code (they can't remove demo limitations), but after 2 years, the code becomes fully free (BSD licensed). I'd like to have Slashdot's input on that. Is my approach doomed to failure, or is it (I hope) a viable way for proprietary shareware developers to open up their source code without foregoing their income?"
Security

Submission + - Are cloud services PCI Compliant?

fooey writes: The company I work for is very strongly considering moving our business which handles millions of credit cards a year to an Amazon EC2 based platform. I've been digging everywhere but can't seem to find a definitive answer on whether or not public cloud services can actually meet PCI Compliance. Different PCI consultants are falling on both sides of the issue, with some taking the stance that it's no different than running on physical machines. While others point out that since cloud services are fundamentally shared storage, memory and processing on shared hardware there's no way cloud architectures could ever be considered PCI complaint. Does anyone with experience on the cloud frontier have advice? or has there been any public rulings from the PCI Council, Visa or Mastercard on where they stand?
Enlightenment

Submission + - The state of Open Source Network Monitoring

BrainstormOC writes: "I am a network admin working for a startup that supports small to medium size businesses. The company already has a decent size client list and have setup network monitoring using a combination of Nagios, Splunk, and Spiceworks. It's been a decent jumping off point but I have been wondering (and advocating a bit) for incorporating either Zenoss or Zabbix as a more inclusive solution. I was tasked in my last position with testing Zabbix and Zenoss for the same situation and found them to be easy to setup but difficult to actually get data pulled from most of our Windows clients. Network mapping was almost non-existant, bugs constantly caused errors, getting the server to pull snmp/wmi data was irritatingly hard. That was 2 years ago, and while i've been checking out the respective forums lately, I still seem to find the same issues. My question now is "What is the State of Zabbix and Zenoss?". Have they matured and worked out the bugs, or are they still more of a pain the ass to implement? Are they really worth making the leap from Nagios for? Have parent/child considerations become the norm? Soft state vs. Hard state? Stability? What has the Slashdot community been experiencing in the last 6-12 months and what could we look forward to in the next 12-24 months?"

Comment Re:Typical (Score 1) 297

For instance, if you quit smoking by age 50, you are 100 times less likely to get cancer as a result of smoking.

Yes, the chance to get cancer drops after you quit smoking but only in the future so the chance you took while smoking is not any less lethal.

I was a smoker in ~10 years. I've had cancer twice even though I quit smoking years before. I'm 32.

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