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Botnet

Microsoft Drops Suit Against Firm In Botnet Case 49

wiredmikey writes "Microsoft has dismissed a lawsuit against a company it contended a month ago was at the heart of the now-defunct Kelihos botnet. In September, Microsoft named Dominique Piatti and his company dotFree Group SRO as controllers of the botnet. The move marked the first time Microsoft had named a defendant in one of its botnet-related civil suits. 'Since the Kelihos takedown, we have been in talks with Mr. Piatti and dotFree Group s.r.o. and, after reviewing the evidence voluntarily provided by Mr. Piatti, we believe that neither he nor his business were involved in controlling the subdomains used to host the Kelihos botnet,' blogged Richard Domingues Boscovich, Senior Attorney for Microsoft's Digital Crimes Unit. 'Rather, the controllers of the Kelihos botnet leveraged the subdomain services offered by Mr. Piatti's cz.cc domain.' In regards to Kelihos, Boscovich said Microsoft is continuing its legal fight against the 22 'John Does' listed as co-defendants in the lawsuit."

Comment BBx, the name that refuses to die (Score 1) 95

While marketed as a "platform," BBx combines an old version of Basic (Business Basic from the 1980's) that runs on a pseudo PICK O/S environment which in turn runs under Solaris, Linux, and Windows.

Basis International developed BBj as the "next generation" of BBx that would move from Basic to Java back in the days when everyone thought Java would take over the world.

To the dismay of Basis, thousands of older customers have been perfectly happy not to migrate their commercial legacy apps off of BBx.

In other words, they WISH they had put BBx to "sleep" years ago, but have been unsuccessful. (Sounds like a lot of COBOL shops.)

What RIM has done is to use a trademark that among BBx customers means old, creaky language who vendor doesn't even like it much any more.

Comment Credits vs Education (Score 1) 608

On the undergraduate level, college is around 40 opportunities to increase skills at every level. This includes reading, critical thinking, social interactive skills including active listening, and exposure to individuals with different backgrounds, cultures, and differing points-of-view.

If you are looking for narrowly defined technical training or need to satisfy your employer's requirement for credits or a diploma, then online options abound.

Every other option robs you of one or more learning aspects noted above. You may still have good reasons to pursue online schooling. Your budget may be limited; your work schedule hellish; you may be disabled and without transportation or heck, maybe you hate sitting in a room with other people. But don't be fooled.

I've pursued both routes and learned a lot in both online and classroom environments. (I have multiple of the above excuses.). But don't be fooled into thinking that your learning experience without a classroom is as good (at least on the undergraduate level) as the traditional method.

And don't be fooled into thinking that I won't k ow that when I interview you for your first job out of college.

Comment This is a potential method to defear noscript (Score 2) 249

Users of noscript have long benefitted from fast loading of web pages as distracting ads pulled from other domains were suppressed.

If entire web pages are "constructed in the cloud" and then presented to users, the additional overhead of ads,
including annoying animation, would once again turn perfectly readable pages into aggravating distractions that
eventually drive readers away. Anyone remember answer.com? AskJeeves? Or cnn.com before noscript?

Bah humbug to this "improvement" in technology.

Comment PASTE WITHOUT FORMATTING (Score 2) 567

Dude, paste-without-formatting is essential for anyone who spends a lot of time cutting and pasting between applications into compound documents.

There are so many whiney paste-related comments in this chain that it is time for one of my rarer than Haley's Comet posts to /.

Immediately (if not sooner), get thy focus to CNET.com, click on the downloads tab, and search on Pure Text.

Both Pure Text and Pure Text Plus are free and legal programs that turn your Windows-Key-V combination into a paste-without-format key.

(Be sure to decline the offer to install the Bing toolbar upon installation.)

I use Pure Text so much, it is one of the few programs I run in my start-up group.

My work here is done.

Comment Re:"Awesome" (Score 1) 316

Over any 5-year period, I hire an average of 1 to 3 IT professionals a month. The performance of each directly reflects on my ability to provide my clients with individuals whose judgement is sound, and who can accept that"at will" employment means they can be laid off at any time without a reason.

With this "little" lapse in judgement, I can assure you that he is not likely to get past HR and background checks, and even less likely to get past me.

If he left with drama elsewhere, he is probably a risk to leave with drama in a future job as well.

I want the best people I can find, and part of that is to figure out the extent to which each individual is likely to suppress personal and professional issues when it makes sense to do so.

I do my best to leave every client and employer on a positive note, regardless of what frustrating shortcomings on their part I discovered along the way.

If you can't do so, just hope you don't want your resume to be embraced by me or anyone in any company who thinks like me,

You don't have to agree with all of my positions on the issue. But if you can't disagree without being disagreeable, I really don't want you on my team.

Comment Education? Here is what was drilled into me... (Score 1) 1277

Every morning. 180 mornings a year. For 13 years. (Year 1 = Kindergarten).

My teacher had us stand at attention, face the flag, a recite the pledge of allegiance as approved as law by the US congress.

That is 2,340 recitations where I swore "I pledge my allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. And to the REPUBLIC, for which it stands, one nation, under god, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

Note that the congress did not ask me to pledge my allegiance to a democracy. In a democracy, each citizen gets an equal vote. Had we been a democracy, Al Gore, not George Bush would have been elected in the year 2000. In a republic, our state "electors" get to override the popular vote if they so choose. (And in 2000, for the 4th time in US history, that is just what happened.)

No matter what the conspiracy theorists say, GW did not "steal" the election. He played by the rules. The rules of our REPUBLIC.

That is the way things are and I don't expect either party to amend the constitution to make us a democracy in my lifetime.

The upper chamber of congress is little better with voters in small states having up to 17 times the power of voters in big states. (I.e. little Utah and big California each get 2 and only two votes.)

However, as I love my country, this is where I'll stay and exercise my right to be a curmudgeon.

Iphone

Submission + - 4G anticipation delaying Verizon iPhone sales?

managerialslime writes: "The Verizon iCripplePhone (slower network speeds than AT&T and no simultaneous voice and data connections) may be thought of as a Generation 1.0 product.

It was introduced only weeks after Verizon started selling cellular modems on their 4G network, with the promise of phones later in the year.

I wonder how many people might have purchased an iPhone but are holding off to see if the yet-to-be-released iPhone 5: (a) resolves the aforementioned technical issues and (b) actually works on the Verizon 4G network.

This is a topic I haven't seen covered on any of the usual phone gossip sites (CNET, Ars Technica, Computer World, etc.)."

Comment Re:So what GS is saying is.... (Score 1) 529

To: Ugandan Upper-class houshold

Dear Sir or Madam,

I am a Goldman Sachs Broker in the United States of America. We have been fortunate enough to aquire many millions of dollars in private Facebook stock, but because of govt. red tape, we cannot sell it here. If you would be kind enough to put 25000 in a foreign account and give us that info, we can make sure you get in on this once in a lifetime opportunity!

Your American counterparts,
Goldman Sachs

To arrive at the comment above is exactly why reading /. is worth every prior moment of drivel. Irony! Humor! jkyrlach, I am now your fan!

Comment Use of Caps Lock key (Score 5, Informative) 968

For modern web-based applications, you are correct that there is little or no reason for the Caps Lock key.

But for the MILLIONS of people whose job requires them to use antiquated legacy systems, it is often essential.

The largely character-based systems used for accounting, order entry, invoicing, and other core functions are often accessed through terminal emulation software or first generation client-server software. These systems often have a great number of "lookup" codes for everything from SKU to client numbers that fail when using lower case. Those still using first generation client-server software are especially inconvenienced as some of these programs have no option to remap the keyboard.

The sheer volume and costs of re-engineering these systems mean that they will be with us for years to come, no matter how ugly and inefficient when compared to modern systems.

(Well, you did ask.)

Submission + - Ask /.: Overseas short term ISP & cell sources

managerialslime writes: Web and cell phone recommendations for international travelers?

I support employees and customers who infrequently travel outside of the United States for both work and pleasure for one to three weeks at a time.

The destinations can be almost any country in the world.

Invariably, they need my staff to find them (a) rental of a "mi-fi" like device so they can get web access for their laptops, iPads, Android, and iPod Touch devices (without onerous surcharges), and (b ) find them short-term cell phone rentals where the per-minute rates won't empty their wallets.

In the last year alone, countries involved included Nicaragua, China, Chile, Finland, and Russia. A trip to India is pending.

I feel like every time someone plans a trip, we need to start over looking for rental vendors.

Is there a web site that keeps travelers up to date on web and cell phone options for short-term trips?

Sites like TripAdvisor.com do a great job of keeping travelers up to date on hotel cleanliness and transportation, but I have yet to find a site to help with voice and data communications for travelers.

(If you don't know of such a site, how about just advice for India?)

Help!

Comment OO more important than some know... (Score 2, Interesting) 589

I use OO as a file-conversion utility (but never for anything else), and was originally dismissive of the amount of attention this thread generated. Over the years, I have supported companies large and small. If you include my direct reports, I have supported thousands of users. Maybe twice in that time have I run into (or heard of) anyone who disclosed that they use OO at home or work.

So I did a little Googling and was amazed to find that multiple sources ". . . estimated that market share of Open Office amounts to 7% for office use and 20% for home use."

"http://books.google.com/books?id=B2Wcn_Io9B8C&pg=PA169&lpg=PA169&dq=%22market+share+of+open+office%22&source=bl&ots=GU9-1psXXG&sig=K50OV3lD3ot-PPJYa_gv2S6P6dk&hl=en&ei=hw-7TLXUE8H-8AaHntjsBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CCMQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=%22market%20share%20of%20open%20office%22&f=false"

If accurate, this makes OO a larger threat to Microsoft than Google as each copy of OO represents a bigger threat to one of Microsoft's three significant streams of profitable revenue (Office, Windows, and Xbox) than anything offered up thus far by Google.

That this "underground" success has happened despite distro companies from Redhat to Ubuntu failing to develop marketing campaigns to bring OO to greater public attention means the opportunity for greater success for OO may still lay before us.

Right now, iPad and Android users are adopting non-MS office apps by the thousands. Perhaps forks like Libre Office will rejuvenate efforts to finally bring a cross-platform (Windows, MAC OS, MAC IOS, Android, and Linux) office that will simplify support efforts.

User Journal

Journal Journal: Best practice or inspiration for presenting forms and tabular data?

Amazon is bursting with books and Google is bursting with pages on how to make attractive pages using images. But what about those of us who live and breathe textual tabular data? Do our web pages and reports need to be deadly dull? Most of IT is still focused on data (as opposed to charts, graphs, pictures, and video). Whether by using easier-to-read colors, fonts, backgrounds, headers or footers, who can refer to a web-site or book that sets the standard for presenting numbers and lette

Comment Can be a usedful course, actually... (Score 1) 118

Stanford University's "Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP)" ( http://plato.stanford.edu/index.html ) has an analysis of how literature of Western Civilization has treated the subject of Zombies beginning with Descartes at http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/zombies/.

If the course in question incorporates this level of discussion in the classes and homework and enable the students to improve their critical thinking and related analytical skills, it really doesn't matter if the "hook" to get students to take the course was the subject of Zombies, slasher flicks, or even a "critical" analysis of the Police Academy movies.

I have one off-spring currently in college studying to be an electrical engineer and can only hope that sometime in the next few years he can take a course that provides that type of "cross subject" context.

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