Comment Keylogger (Score 1) 76
Sounds like Google wants you to install a keylogger for your safety.
Sounds like Google wants you to install a keylogger for your safety.
So what you're saying is that Biggie Smalls was giving out good financial advise? "Mo Money, Mo Problems"
The exact same way they are doing it now.
(I have no idea.)
The summary seems to say that only high-value targets are being intercepted, and that Cisco is trying to protect those customers by shipping to somewhere other than their place of business. If that's their new form of protection, it doesn't change anything if the NSA knows who it belongs to.
Have you never read The Jargon File. It's required reading for any hacker.
How can you call yourself a
Seems easy to circumvent. The [GOVERNMENT ABBREVIATION] monitors the original online or phone order and knows who ordered it. Who cares where it's being delivered.
First line of the article:
"What if the key to your house was shared with 28,000 other homes?"
The fact is, you very well might share the key to your house with more than 28000 other homes. Common lock brands you can buy at Home Depot, Lowe's, etc. create a surprisingly low number of different key/tumbler combinations.
Obviously anyone used to an Earth day will have problems coping. If we ever colonize Mars, the first generation immigrants will have it rough, but their children will find it perfectly natural.
As the saying goes...
Price, quality, speed - pick two. The article doesn't seem to say any more than this. The foreign consultants apparently are very good at the price aspect.
Someone didn't RTFA. Neither of those things will prevent this. The tracking is injected into the HTTP headers by the ISP. Even if you don't accept their cookie, they can still track you.
This just in... faster than light speed is now possible by dropping a clump of light crystals on the floor and then running away.
Let's say you lived in a valley and couldn't pick up any OTA TV broadcasts. You have a neighbor who lives on a hill who can. Aereo is like your neighbor allowing you to put an antenna on their property (and charging a few bucks for their trouble and the use of their land). I don't understand the problem.
What's next? Getting people to use it after they download it. I suppose I'm counted in that 100 million, but I've never actually had a reason to use the product. Absolutely everyone I know in business and personal life uses MS Office, and I get the whole MS Office suite free through work or included in any new PC purchase.
Dear Slashdot,
Please consider your audience. This might be the top "science" story on Hollywood Insider, but on Slashdot it's just insulting.
You advocate a ________ approach to calendar reform. Your idea will not work. Here is why:
There are two ways to write error-free programs; only the third one works.