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Comment They tried this on me a few times... (Score 5, Interesting) 185

I've had my run-in with this before. I'm just a generic every day sysadmin and have no real involvement with the security community, short of idling on IRC with a bunch of more active people. Here are my experiences:

In 1997 or '98 I was the sysadmin for a mom 'n pop local ISP. We got hit by a massive DOS attack - keep in mind this was in the pre-smurf/DDOS era, so it really did warrant the attention of the feds. The owner contacted them, and they talked to me about getting any logs we might have (which of course I was ready to provide). I asked them where they wanted me to send them, and... "No, why don't you meet us out somewhere? We'll buy you lunch.". Despite the offer of free food, the alarm bells were going off by this point. So, I met them at a local coffee shop, and out of the 30 or so minutes I was there, they spent maybe two minutes discussing the DDOS with me, and the rest of the time attempting to get me to inform on the local 2600 group. I declined repeatedly, and they continued to make more forceful and threatening requests. Every time I disagreed with them, they looked at each other - and this was the creepiest (and obviously rehearsed) behavior I've ever seen. They never did get those logs from me.

After that I didn't hear anything until around 2005 or so when one of my ex-coworkers from another company called to tell me two men came by looking for me, and that they had government plates on their car. They left a card, but since I'm not under any obligation to call them, I never did. As the years went by, I received more calls from different people with a similar story.

And my last run-in with them was only a year or two ago - someone called me from a cell phone claiming he was with the FBI, and he had my computer and I needed to come to the local field office to pick it up. I found that to be rather unlikely since I tend to hang onto them until they're dead, I certainly wasn't missing one, and then they (minus the drives - I still have those) go into the bin. After a week of ignoring his calls he stopped bothering me.

To this day I have no idea what they wanted, but the entire thing reeked of ill-spent tax dollars.

I really don't care anymore, so the hell with posting as AC...

Comment Re:YOU COMMIE SPY! (Score 1) 698

It's on Hulu, so go watch it now and redeem yourself. Peter Sellers did such an awesome job in it.

Trivia: The set with the interior of the bomber in it was designed completely by guessing what it would look like; no one on the crew of the film had ever seen one before as it was classified when the film was made. The end result was so accurate they received a visit from the military wanting to know who had leaked information about it.

Comment Re:Answer (Score 1) 65

Same here. When FileVault (VileFault, if you like) first came out I ran into the same problem as you. I was able to repair it, log in, and recover some of my data (most resulted in the spinning beachball of death). Trying to convert back to a non-encrypted FS resulted in the machine telling me I needed roughly 12 petabytes of free disk space.

Shame really, it was a good idea, but a very bad execution I think.

Comment Re:ehh (Score 1) 672

Same here, after years of owning PPC macs and never having a problem, I've had endless trouble from my MBPs.

The first one I had was a first generation one and I kinda expected the worst, but it lasted three years with two trips into Apple Service (logic board replaced twice). The new one (last of the previous body style MBPs) is garbage though, it's been non-stop odd behavior that I can't pin down to any one thing. Crashes consistently and runs slowly with Linux or OSX. Won't buy another one.

Comment Re:On behalf of arizona... (Score 1) 624

Funny, that. Most of the Blackwater guys that were here after Katrina were wearing plain clothes and weren't (AFAIK) deputized. They were just out of town thugs with guns, not too different from the local thugs with guns. The only way you could tell them apart from the local thuggery was that they had better weaponry.

I wasn't actually referring to Blackwater, even though it is of course applicable here. I was more referring to the NOPD guys that beat the schoolteacher up during Katrina, the ones that mug you, the ones that guard warehouses full of cocaine, the ones that in 2008 opened fire at an inspection sticker station because they didn't feel like waiting in line. People like Antoinette Franks and Len Davis (both NOPD officers and on death row).

Comment Re:US laws are not the best (Score 1, Informative) 582

As much as I'd love to work in the EU, it isn't that easy. I seriously looked into it a few years ago (and still do from time to time) only to come to the conclusion that many EU employers really don't want Americans working there. They'd much rather take care of their own and employee EU residents. Sucks for me, but I do see the truth of it.

Security

Submission + - zero day vulnerability in Microsoft Video ActiveX 1

ucanlookitup writes: Microsoft has warned of a zero day vulnerability affecting IE users on XP or Windows Server 2003. The vulnerability allows remote users to execute arbitrary code with the same privileges as the users. The vulnerability is triggered when users visit a web site with malicious code. The advisory can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/advisory/972890.mspx. Until Microsoft develops a patch, a work around is available at http://support.microsoft.com/kb/972890#FixItForMe
Power

Submission + - More success for Polywell fusion project.

erikson1970 writes: The day before slashdot cited new woes at the multi-billion dollar ITER fusion project, the folks at Talk-Polywell blog dug-up positive developments in EMC2's few million dollar (less than $30M to-date) Polywell-based fusion project. It looks like the Santa Fe-based research group has been extended another tranche of US Navy research funds to develop the next in a series of ever-growing Polywell fusors. The Talk-Polywell crowd has mined the Navy's contract award documents for juicy technical details of the so-called WB-8, the next Polywell project (WB = wiffleball because it looks like one). Past slashdot articles on this effort and its late founder, Dr. Bussard, are here and here. A nice summary of the Talk-Polywell findings is at the Iecfusiontech blog.
Medicine

Submission + - U.S. finalises stem cell research guidelines (cosmosmagazine.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The U.S. government unveiled final rules for embryonic stem cell research, laying out ground rules for "ethically responsible, scientifically worthy" studies eligible for federal funds. The new rules, which go into effect today, follow President Barack Obama's March 9 executive order lifting a ban on embryonic stem cell research, an order that went into effect under his predecessor, George W. Bush.
The Internet

Submission + - Oldest Known Bible Published Online 3

loteck writes: Codex Sinaiticus, a project that aims to digitize and disseminate the oldest known version of the Bible, went online today. The 1600 year-old text is substantially different from the modern Bible, including the addition of at least 9 books, and the omission of "some familiar — very important — passages", "including verses dealing with the resurrection of Jesus." The process of digitizing these fragile documents is also covered in some detail.

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