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Comment: Simple Explanation for Instagram (Score 5, Interesting) 124

For anyone who's still scratching their head about the instagram purchase, here's something to think about.

At least one of Instagram's employees, Philip McAllister, was at Gowalla when it was picked up by Facebook less than 6 months ago.

That guy might be the luckiest bastard in the world, having worked for 2 tiny companies whose only significant accomplishment was getting acquired by Facebook. On the other hand, Zuckerberg could just be funneling company money to friends?

Comment: Re:Personal Deal (Score 4, Insightful) 307

by FsG (#39730429) Attached to: Zuckerberg Made Instagram Deal Alone

I figured the same thing. At least one of Instagram's employees, Philip McAllister, was at Gowalla when it was picked up by Facebook less than 6 months ago.

That guy might be the luckiest bastard in the world, having worked for 2 tiny companies whose only significant act was getting acquired by Facebook. On the other hand, Zuckerberg could just be funneling company money to friends?

Comment: Re:Not sympathetic. (Score 1) 825

by FsG (#39078261) Attached to: Obama Pushes For Cheaper Pennies

That NPR article is pretty outrageous. He writes that everyone tried to get their gold at the same time and there wasn't enough to go around, therefore the British government decided to stop giving out gold altogether!

What I see here is criminal fraud, perpetuated by the government. The paper bills were supposed to have been claim slips for gold, with a government *promise* that if they ever wanted to claim the gold, it would be there. The government of Britain clearly broke its promise, as there wasn't enough gold to cover all the claim slips that had been issued. Rather than own up to this mistake and make reforms to avoid this in the future, they abandoned the gold standard to make it easier to perpetuate such fraud in the future.

Comment: Re:Courts Won't Win -- Use Hidden Volumes (Score 1) 1047

by FsG (#38808779) Attached to: US Judge Rules Defendant Can Be Forced To Decrypt Hard Drive
No, but crime lord types probably will be smart enough.

When I wrote the original post, I was picturing a TrueCrypt volume in a file rather than full disk encryption. You create the file volume, say 2 GB in size, and fill half of it with grandma's recipes. Then you create a shadow volume within the 1GB blank space of that file, and put the incriminating data in there. They'll find the TrueCrypt volume/file on your computer and order you to provide the passphrase, so you decrypt the recipes. File access/modification dates won't be an issue -- it's been a few months since you last baked grandma's chocolate chip cookies, that's all!

Comment: Courts Won't Win -- Use Hidden Volumes (Score 4, Interesting) 1047

by FsG (#38802383) Attached to: US Judge Rules Defendant Can Be Forced To Decrypt Hard Drive
Disk encryption software already supports hidden volumes. Even if this kind of decision becomes dominant case law, that won't accomplish anything. People will just start deploying volumes with two passphrases, and when ordered to give up the passphrase, giving up the one that decrypts grandma's recipe collection.

Since there's no way to prove that a second volume exists within the blank space of the first one, encryption will win the day.

Comment: Re:Financial Mismanagement? (Score 1) 316

by FsG (#37820526) Attached to: Wikileaks Suspends Publishing Of Cables Due To "Financial Blockade"

Unfortunately, paper checks don't travel well outside the country. This is because they generally clear through the nation's central bank. International wire transfers are expensive and troublesome, so much so that 99% of potential donors will change their minds about donating.

When Visa, MC, and PayPal block you, moving money internationally becomes reeeealy hard.

People tend to make rules for others and exceptions for themselves.

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