Comment Re:Possible sequence (Score 1) 171
Bill Gates? is that you?
Bill Gates? is that you?
You get administrative rights, it's in the Checkpoint report in the article: http://www.checkpoint.com/blog...
Analysis by Check Point security researchers revealed how this particular vulnerability could be exploited by attackers:
1.The bug enables unknown users to gain administrative privileges
2.By using these admin credentials, attackers can then view and edit private and undisclosed bug details. Software bug tracking data is typically closely guarded as it exposes software vulnerabilities and known issues
3.Furthermore, this access allows attackers to exploit design weaknesses, or even irreversibly destroy bug data, slowing down development
And have info about their disclosure:
September 29th – Vulnerability discovered and verified by Check Point security researchers
September 30th – Report submitted to the Bugzilla team
September 30th – Acknowledgement and confirmation of vulnerability and severity received by Mozilla
September 30th – Bugzilla team privately shared preliminary patch with prominent Bugzilla installations
October 6th – Security advisory and final patch released
The Checkpoint article is a lot more professional than the Krebs article No jabs at FOSS either.
This looks like a major company which uses FOSS (IIRC, SPLAT is a Linux-based-platform) made a contribution in discovering a vulnerability in common software.
Point taken. My outrage is misdirected.
Mariott + jamming hotspots filled me with rage.
This shit is why I strongly prefer AirBnB or other alternative forms of hospitality.
I was at a hotel in London and found out that "Free wifi" meant it was freely available to reach the paid gateway. Sleezery seems to be in all large chains in large cities. You would think the high premium on staying there, and the economy of scale of the size of the hotel would mean that it's easier to provide good service to guests.
By contrast, with AirBnB you'll probably get secure, unrestricted residential wifi, or even an ethernet jack to plug into. Sure you might not, and you might not get a clean place. But there's no guarantee of cleanliness at the Mariott either, and you're certain not to get a free Internet connection.
Oh and it's actually amazing at adding columns of numbers. No need to take your eyes off the paper. E.g., "What's 34+52+1324+53+6+23+11+43..."?
For smaller calculations, it's ridiculous.
I can take notes with it, read (and carefully send) texts and call people while stuck in bumper to bumper traffic.
It's not perfect, but better than nothing.
I'm considering jailbreaking my iPhone to be able to run git. Otherwise... I just haven't had the need.
Android's a different story. You need to root your phone so that you can firewall your flashlight app.
"Here are 20 videos detailing stupid procedures you need to go through to request access to customers' systems/networks/databases to even think about doing your job"
Access request procedures change very fast and are tedious to contribute updates to.
Videos have a high friction to update. Out of date docmentation is worse than no documentation at all.
Wikis have a low friction to update. Even the new hire can fix things as they execute the procedures.
I don't know why people would use videos, but then I also think that videos are terrible learning tools. But then, maybe it's just me, there are some strong visual learners out there.
It's a contradiction I guess. A really good design looks obvious.
...and a company which purports to support creativity, and feels so strongly about rounded rectangles that they introduce them as a graphic primitive on early systems (per Isaacson?), sues another company for daring to use rounded rectangles.
I hope they get sued for infringing on Samsung's design. Samsung went out of their way to find a way to make something equally effective, distinct non-obvious but obvious looking. Now Apple seems to think their screen size and aspects of design are obvious.
I think he/she means KDE Remote Desktop Sharing http://docs.kde.org/stable/en/kdenetwork/krfb/index.html and is talking about the concept of the X11 root window http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_window
Samsung needs to sue them for this innovation.
http://www.pcmag.com/slideshow/story/316700/samsung-galaxy-round-and-5-other-curved-phones
Yes, that's why they had local events in other cities.
But I think it's kind of dumb to think that in a city with tens or hundreds of thousands of cars idling daily in traffic for the past 70 years, that 500 busses making a single trip is going to have a more negative impact than if leaders don't hear some kind of voice for change.
"Also, the over-65's have the shortest time stake in this. plus have had the trappings of gold plated pensions that the generation behind them cannot look forward to. It's a disgusting state of affairs and as a Scot I am embarrassed for my country."
Young people can always jump ship and leave the country if a 'yes' doesn't work out. Elderly people can't. In that way you could say that they have the most stake in this. Selfish? yes, but their ability to help themselves was in their youth. They did that and now, after playing by the rules of the U.K. for their lifetime, it's risking uncertainty to change the rules.
Spoken like a C programmer.
I do stand corrected, "gibberish" is spelled with a "j".
Now tell me what evidence there is that global warming is a hoax?
New York... when civilization falls apart, remember, we were way ahead of you. - David Letterman