Comment Re:I feel safer with NSA than Google (Score 1) 281
"it is believed" - conspiracy theorists will believe anything that supports their theories.
Last time I checked, I'm not an oil&gas company.
"it is believed" - conspiracy theorists will believe anything that supports their theories.
Last time I checked, I'm not an oil&gas company.
Neither will NSA. You have your Three Letter Agencies mixed up.
All things considered, I trust the NSA more with my data. At least they're not in the business of selling it.
... You are measured by the budget that you consume.
Mod parent up insightful!
The pumps lost power after the backup systems failed (ran out of battery, and the generators were knocked out), and that's what caused the reactors to overheat and meltdown. If power had been retained to the pumps, the major problems would have been averted.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
"The switching stations that provided power from the three backup generators located higher on the hillside failed when the building that housed them flooded.[68] Power for control systems switched over to batteries that were designed to last about eight hours.[102] Further batteries and mobile generators were dispatched to the site. They were delayed by poor road conditions and the first arrived only at 21:00 11 March,[95][103] almost six hours after the tsunami."
After years of insisting that the rest of the organization exists to make the CIO's job easier, it's great to see the 'revolt of the masses' moving away from the one-size-fits-all/everything-Microsoft-regardless-of-the-security-cost solution to stuff that makes the individual more productive.
The complexity of everything makes the IT job harder, but "I can't be bothered to learn new things" response to the user demand for alternatives is ultimately self-defeating.
As a side observation over the last 35 years in the business, systems that support multiple platforms/clients/etc tend to be a lot more reliable than those that support a single configuration. The unwritten and often unknown assumptions about the execution environment (client or server, etc) are latent bugs even in a monoculture. (I'm certainly old enough to remember how much software broke in the move from 32 bit to 64 bit; anyone who coded as if integers and pointers are same size/interoperable got all the problems s/he deserved!)
And anecdotally, it seems many, if not most, of the ATC failures I remember hearing about in the US have also been power problems. These are kinda hard to test, as I wrote to a friend, "The on-duty ATC controllers get irate when you 'pull the big power plug' on their shift."
Usually failures like these are chains of events, e.g. "UPS ran out of batteries more rapidly than expected, and then we couldn't get the generators started."
Power problems are what doomed Fukushima, too, by the way.
Well, the original thread was on BOA. Sounds to me like your business needs to change its bank.
Let's be clear: This is an Opt-In "feature". It is neither mandated nor included by default.
(That doesn't make it less objectionable, but it does clarify how it could get onto your computer.)
I just read through the Bank of America Online Banking Service Agreement, and I don't see anything like this, nor is there any mention of IBM. Reading the Wikipedia page, it seems this is software used -inside- a bank.
Mod parent up insightful. And from extensive experience booking travel, I can assure you the tools the airlines use are better (more responsive, better data) than what they give us access to.
Yeah. Autism Speaks is not exactly a good source for information.
It's possible there are other versions. But that's not my point. The version that has been discovered and documented runs on Windows, a fact that is probably deliberately not made clear in the articles.
To discover this is a Windows-only virus? That was the first thing that crossed my mind, what platform(s) are vulnerable? It sure as hell isn't clearly stated in any of the articles I read, you have to dive into the details of the Symantec white paper to notice that all the attack vectors were specific to Windows.
And how much does the tech journalism community and the security products & services industry, from Ars to The Verge, to Symantec, get paid to hide the fact this is Yet Another Windows (only) vulnerability?
I have no idea. I have never seen him write a thing that was actually of interest or value, but so far as I can tell, anything he writes is automatically approved by Slashdot. He's guaranteed front-page placement. What is going on here? Who is he, and why does Slashdot owe him this?
Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?