Comment: Besides helping a few traders.. (Score 1) 158
Comment: The new slashdot, now even whiter! (Score 1) 2254
Next up, IPv6!
Embedded Linux 1-Second Cold Boot To QT 141
from the why-does-my-phone-need-2-minutes? dept.
Comment: Re:So how about it, Slashdot? (Score 1) 247
Comment: Re:Flash security has always frightened me (Score 1) 355
``Browser vendors have the right incentives because users have a realistic choice of browsers. Flash is an all-or-nothing affair.''
And that is a real problem for users, and not just because of its effect on security. Only Adobe makes software that can handle all the Flash applets out there, and anytime there is only a single supplier, the incentives to make things better for customers aren't there. Adobe has been pretty nice with Flash, considering.
Comment: Re:The vulnerability (Score 1) 355
Seems to me there _is_ an easy fix: disable that behavior by default (why would you want it, anyway?). Then, for sites that are broken by it, allow it to be selectively enabled.
Of course, the fact that Adobe isn't fixing it and we aren't allowed to fix it nicely illustrates why having the whole world depend on a piece of proprietary software is a bad idea at least from a security point of view.
Comment: Why nobody has asked him yet about robots.txt (Score 1) 549
Nominum Calls Open Source DNS "a Recipe For Problems" 237
from the dem's-fightin'-woids dept.
Nominum calls Open Source DNS 'a recipe for proble
Comment: Re:Recycle them (Score 1) 546
Securely wipe them if you must
Securely wipe them even if you intend to store them for a while until you get better use for them or will throw them away. It's boring work, but you're making sure no private data gets out. Even a simple operating system installation has a store of encrypted passwords which can be abused.
Spying on the TOR anonymisation network->
Link to Original Source
Verizon vs. the Needham Fire Department 195
from the never-had-that-problem-before dept.
Schneier: Security Theater->
Link to Original Source