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Fëanáro (130986)

Fëanáro
  (email not shown publicly)
Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday September 12 2007, @10:11PM
from the big-boom dept.
mahesh_gharat writes "Russia has tested the "Father of all bombs," a conventional air-delivered explosive that experts say can only be compared with a nuclear weapon in terms of its destructive power.The device is a fuel-air explosive, commonly known as a vacuum bomb, that spreads a high incendiary vapour cloud over a wide area and then ignites it, creating an ultra-sonic shock wave and searing fireball that destroys everything in its wake."
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 [+] story, technology, boom, foab, news, coldwar
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday August 20 2007, @12:52PM
from the ddos-ing-yourself dept.
brajesh writes to tell us that Skype has blamed its outage over the last week on Microsoft's Patch Tuesday. Apparently the huge numbers of computers rebooting (and the resulting flood of login requests) revealed a problem with the network allocation algorithm resulting in a couple days of downtime. Skype further stressed that there was no malicious activity and user security was never in any danger.
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 [+] story, communications, badjournalism, lie, software, skype
Posted by kdawson on Saturday August 18 2007, @05:57AM
from the just-too-convenient dept.
Lucas123 writes "IT managers at colleges and universities are grappling with the problem of finding ways to better secure removable storage media in an environment that encourages information sharing. Draconian security mandates 'may be common in the corporate world, but "we don't have the flexibility to simply say all inbound traffic is locked down," said Jason Pufahl, information security team lead for IT services at the University of Connecticut.'"
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 [+] story, it, security, education, thumbwrestling, rassle
Posted by Zonk on Tuesday May 15 2007, @10:03AM
from the i-see-what-you-were-trying-to-do-there dept.
cnet-declan writes "Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is asking Congress to make 'attempted' copyright infringement a federal crime. The text of the legislation as well as the official press-release is available online. Rep. Lamar Smith, a key House Republican, said he 'applauds' the idea, and his Democratic counterpart is probably on board too. In addition, the so-called Intellectual Property Protection Act of 2007 would create a new crime of life imprisonment for using pirated software in some circumstances, expand the DMCA with civil asset forfeiture, and authorize wiretaps in investigations of Americans who are 'attempting' to infringe copyrights. Does this go too far?"
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 [+] story, politics, internet, usa, court, media,
Posted by Zonk on Tuesday March 13 2007, @12:01PM
from the don't-forget-to-wear-sneakers dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Computerworld has up an article entitled 'How to Surf Anonymously without a Trace'. It purports to offer tips on how to avoid detection by anyone attempting to monitor your internet access. 'If you don't like the limitations imposed on you by [proxy] sites like the Cloak or would simply prefer to configure anonymous surfing yourself, you can easily set up your browser to use an anonymous proxy server to sit between you and the sites you visit. To use an anonymous proxy server with your browser, first find an anonymous proxy server. Hundreds of free, public proxy servers are available, but many frequently go offline or are very slow. Many sites compile lists of these proxy servers, including Public Proxy Servers and the Atom InterSoft proxy server list.'"
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 [+] story, yro, privacy, internet, tor, pr0n, maybe

  What are your free software classics? 2006-12-29 02:56 Statecraftsman

Submitted by Statecraftsman on Friday December 29 2006, @02:56AM
Statecraftsman writes "In literature, the classics are well-known and widely studied. As a perpetually aspiring programmer, I wonder from which free software projects programmers have learned the most. What project's code do you most admire? If you were starting fresh today, what project would you use as a model of great design and implementation?"
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 [+] submission, askslashdot, programming
Posted by Zonk on Tuesday December 12 2006, @11:19AM
from the keep-the-hold-sealed-there-lad dept.
mork writes "Matousec.com, as part of a larger analysis of personal firewalls on Windows, has conducted a thorough leak test of 21 pieces of firewall software. Leak tests imitate common methods used by trojans or spyware to send your information from your computer. Windows Firewall XP SP2 fails every test, so the fears that the days of third party firewall software was over seem groundless. Surprisingly the two top programs are both freeware." From the article: "Some firewalls totally failed tests made against their default settings but their results on the highest security settings were much better. Kaspersky Internet Security 6.0.0.303 is the product with the biggest difference between the default settings score and the highest security settings score. Another such product is Safety.Net. Some products like BitDefender, F-Secure, McAfee, Panda, etc. include antivirus engines. The sad and funny thing in once is that lots of them mark leak-testing software as viruses or malware."
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 [+] story, it, security
Posted by Zonk on Sunday December 10 2006, @09:48PM
from the tired-hampsters dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Computers take too long to boot up, and it doesn't make sense to me. Mine takes around 30 seconds; it is double or triple that for some of my friends' computers that I have used. Why can't a computer turn on and off in an instant just like a TV? 99% of boots, my computer is doing the exact same thing. Then I get to Windows XP with maybe 50 to 75 megs of stuff in memory. My computer should be smart enough to just load that junk into memory and go with it. You could put this data right at the very start of the hard drive. Whenever you do something with the computer that actually changes what happens during boot, it could go through the real booting process and save the results. Doing this would also give you instant restarts. You just hit your restart button, the computer reloads the memory image, and you can be working again. Or am I wrong? Why haven't companies made it a priority to have 'instant on' desktops and laptops?"
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 [+] story, askslashdot, os, n00b, hibernate, because, slown00bday, suspendtoram
Posted by kdawson on Wednesday November 29 2006, @04:40AM
from the call-that-multilateral? dept.
Pro-SEO writes, "An official document (PDF), dated November 19, summarizes an agreement between the U.S. and Russia in which Russia has agreed to close down AllofMP3.com, and any sites that 'permit illegal distribution of music and other copyright works.' The agreement is posted to the Web site for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. It summarizes the joint efforts of the two countries to fight content piracy, an issue in which Russia and Eastern Europe figure prominently." From the document: "This agreement sets the stage for further progress on IPR issues in Russia through the next phase of multilateral negotiations, during which the United States and other WTO members will examine Russia's IPR regime."
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 [+] story, yro, music, haha, mp3, allofmp3, noooooooo, copyright
Posted by kdawson on Tuesday November 28 2006, @08:21PM
from the big-purple-capitulation dept.
davidwr writes, "Earlier this year, EFF sued the Barney the Dinosaur people for harassing a Barney parody web site. Well, Barney finally surrendered, err I mean, learned to share. For more, read the case history at the EFF site."
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 [+] story, yro, censorship, eff, iloveyou, youloveme, parody, wereahappyfamily

  IT: Easy Throw-Away Email Addresses 2006-11-28 18:32

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday November 28 2006, @06:32PM
from the bug-me-not dept.
netbuzz writes, "A fellow teaching himself Seam has come up with a clever Web app called 10 Minute Mail. It gives you a valid e-mail address — instantly — for use in registering at Web sites. Ten minutes later (more if you ask), it's gone. You can read mail and reply to it from the page where you create the throw-away address. Limited utility, yes, but easy and free."
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 [+] story, it, internet, mailinator, spamgourmet, spam, email, oldnews
Posted by Zonk on Saturday November 04 2006, @07:40PM
from the for-reasons dept.
filenavigator writes "Microsoft has delayed the automatic install of IE 7 in Japan. There's an an interesting response in one of the MSDN blogs. IT pros are saying that they have done this because business users asked it to be delayed. It seems to me many business users here in North America wanted it to be delayed as well, but were forced to scramble and deploy IE 7 blocking software. This looks like more proof that the IE 7 automatic push was more for marketing reasons, than security. If it were a security issue, than why wait on the Japanese push?" Does anyone know the 'technical' reason that the autoinstall was delayed?
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 [+] story, it, microsoft, ie7, flamebait, ie7sucks, test, webbrowser

  Games: Throwable Game Controllers 2006-10-30 16:26

Posted by Zonk on Monday October 30 2006, @04:26PM
from the klonk-owww dept.
dptalia writes "In trolling recent patents, Barry Fox found one for a throwable game controller. This controller would be shaped like a football or a frisbee and be connected wirelessly to a console. The user could then play digital games like catch, or have a distance throwing competition. The controllers have embedded GPS, an altimeter, and an accelerometer to be able to determine the accuracy of the throws."
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 [+] story, games, toy, dumb, patent, gamecontroller, lame, bad
Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday October 30 2006, @01:19PM
from the gotta-love-the-bugs dept.
peterdaly writes "Automatic commercial detection is the "killer app" feature that none of the commercial DVR's dare to include. MythTV's automatic commercial detection does a great job of properly separating commercials from content. Here's how the commercial flagging works."
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 [+] story, tv, mythtv, slashdotted, dvr, pvr,