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Comment: Re:Taxes I pay $$ I take home :( (Score 1) 394

by Harik (#39678309) Attached to: My most recent tax bill was ...

Why, it's almost as if your taxes were based on multiple people working and you're looking only at your own salary. Did you pay more in taxes than you paid everyone in your company combined?

You're free to move to Somolia, where there's no taxes at all; but I guess you like stupid things like "Roads", "A functioning legal system", "Not being murdered", crap like that. Guess what? You get to pay for it, same as the rest of us.

Comment: So, is linux illegal? (Score 1) 428

by Harik (#38785311) Attached to: Megaupload Shutdown: Should RapidShare and Dropbox Worry?

I've got a few issues with this whole thing.

First, since the main complaint against megaupload was they were doing data-deduplication, at what granularity do you need to dedupe before you become infringing?
This is problematic because of #2: DMCA complaints lie. Like, the majority of the time. They keyword search and send takedown requests to files with names they don't like without ever seeing the content. So, if a service dedupes content like that all you need to do is upload something that's popular and name it "Britney Spears #1 hit poop" and get it DMCAd. Troll heaven.
Third, their "Paying pirates" is a bald-faced lie. Putting up content you own and getting paid for it was a way to make money for independants of all stripes - modmakers, musicians, amateur directors, etc. The fact that some people made money with things they didn't own (And don't forget that takedowns were honored, dispite the misleading wording of the indictment.) doesn't change the fact that it had a massively non-infringing use. As for their "evidence", try to find one ISP where employees don't talk about using their bandwidth to download not-entirely-legit content. It's considered a job perk of a fat pipe.

Lastly, The MU takedown had the intended effect. Filesonic died early this morning as well. If you don't own your own hosting, good fucking luck sharing anything you've created with the world. There's a lot of minecraft mods that are just gone now, for instance.

Comment: Wikipedia still accessable with trivial workaround (Score 1) 291

by Harik (#38735630) Attached to: Wikipedia Still Set For Full Blackout Wednesday

Add the following URL to AddblockPlus (with http, not hxxp).
hxxp://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:BannerLoader&banner=blackout*

Since you're needing this comment, you're already aware of SOPA and you want to use wikipedia today. Also, pass it on to anyone who complains. They're aware of SOPA and they get to learn about how they'll need to use obnoxious technological workarounds to legislative damage.

Also, today's a great day for creative wiki editing.

Comment: Re:Who cares about cards? (Score 1) 240

by Harik (#35643526) Attached to: AMD Challenges NVIDIA To Graphics Throw-Down

actually you picked a terrible example - Crysis 2 was written for consoles and ported to PC, which means it's didn't even support DX11 on release, and it certainly doesn't have a DX11 optimized workflow. The levels are smaller, more confined, the textures have to fit in console RAM, etc. You're not missing
out on anything by not having a new card.

Comment: Re:I didn't read the whole thing (Score 1) 102

by Harik (#33864980) Attached to: Building the Realtime User Experience

Ugh, don't say 'pixel perfect', I utterly despise pixel-perfect designs. What DPI? 100? 80? 120? 600 for print?

pixel-perfect designs that break when I set a minimum font size are obnoxious as hell, when I have to select text that flows under other elements and paste it somewhere to read it. Ugh. Seriously, don't even think about giving designers that kind of control until they've proven themselves able to design for something other than their own monitor.

Comment: Re:Forget the self-advertisement, it's a real issu (Score 1) 488

by Harik (#33641578) Attached to: Linux Kernel Exploit Busily Rooting 64-Bit Machines

Well, for one both the exploit and the detector are broken by default - it's looking for per_cpu__current_task for >=2.6.30 kernels and not every kernel has that - it's just 'current_task' on 2.6.36-rc4. Turn off that check and both the detector and exploit work. Ignoring the l33+, the important bits are the shellcode and any remnants of the exploit when run.

The exploit itself is trivial to understand - compat_alloc_user_space() didn't check the bounds, and one user didn't properly handle the checking first.

Here's the actual exploit:
getsockopt(7, SOL_IP, MCAST_MSFILTER, 0x804b4a0, 0x804b8a8) = -1 EFAULT (Bad address)
and a quick glance at net/compat.c shows that no check is made on optlen. The rest is just stack-trashing and shellcode,
your basic exploit.

Advertising

Anti-Product Placement For Negative Branding 130

Posted by samzenpus
from the touch-of-death dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Product placement to promote your brand just isn't enough any more. These days, apparently, some companies are resorting to anti-product placement in order to get competitors' products in the hands of 'anti-stars.' The key example being Snooki from Jersey Shore, who supposedly is being sent handbags by companies... but the bags being sent are of competitors' handbags as a way to avoid Snooki carrying their own handbag, and thus potentially damaging their brand."

Comment: Re:If it comes out and works well (Score 1) 273

by Harik (#33403352) Attached to: Native ZFS Is Coming To Linux Next Month

He asked when you could do the equivilant of rm /bin/rm - which you can't in windows. Although I'm not entirely sure that's a filesystem thing, it's a VFS layer thing where an open is an automatic exclusive read lock.

Which is why you get the ridiculous volume shadow copy bullshit and forced reboots to update anything.

Role Playing (Games)

Dungeon Siege III Being Developed by Obsidian 84

Posted by Soulskill
from the hack-and-slash dept.
Square Enix has announced that it will be publishing Dungeon Siege III, which is in development at Obsidian Entertainment, makers of Alpha Protocol, Neverwinter Nights 2, and the as yet unfinished Fallout: New Vegas. Obsidian will be receiving input from Gas Powered Games, the developer behind the first two installments in the Dungeon Siege series. No release date has been set, but the game is planned for the PC, PS3, and Xbox 360, and it will include a co-op mode.

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