Forgot your password?

typodupeerror

Comment: Sorry, what? (Score 1) 318

by Saint Aardvark (#38972227) Attached to: File Sharing In the Post MegaUpload Era
  1. What's their methodology? How exactly did they get this info? I see nothing here like a link to a full paper.
  2. Who are they and why should I trust them? Disclaimer: I could turn out to be woefully ignorant, and maybe I should just get my head out of my ass. But their main web page appears to be amazingly content-free, and there are two posts on the blog -- this is one of them. (To be fair, the
  3. They only present two data points here -- Jan 18 and Jan 19. What's happened since? Why the breathless summary (Slashdot's and the blog post) saying file sharing is all going to Europe now?
  4. The post-Jan 19 diagram says the hosting provider breakdown changed, which is presumably why they're breathless about Europe. But there's no data presented on where those new providers are located -- no corporate info, no datacentre locations, nothing.

If there's something to see here, I'm missing it.

Comment: Radia Perlman's Ephemerizer (Score 2) 209

by Saint Aardvark (#38151564) Attached to: Ask Slashdot: Data Remanence Solutions?

I think that what you want is The Ephemerizer, by Radia Perlman (she of OSPF fame). I heard about this a few years ago at the LISA conference, and a bit of digging turned it up. From the abstract:

This paper is about how to keep data for a finite time, and then make it unrecoverable after that. It is difficult to ensure that data is completely destroyed. To be available before expiration it is desirable to create backup copies. Then absolute deletion becomes difficult, because even after explicitly deleting it, copies might remain on backup media, or in swap space, or be forensically recoverable. The obvious solution is to store the data encrypted, and then delete the key after expiration.

Google turns up this copy in PDF.

Hope that helps!

Comment: Safety deposit box (Score 1) 402

by Saint Aardvark (#37909560) Attached to: Ask Slashdot: How To Securely Share Passwords?

You could try something like:

  • Keep a list of passwords (I use Emacs + GPG, but there's bound to be something out there that'll work for you if that's not your style)
  • Print out the list monthly (if that really is how often you change passwords)
  • Seal it and put it in a safety deposit box at your local bank
  • Tell everyone "In case of my death, go here for passwords"

(Alternately, this could be something a lawyer could help with -- something like holding passwords in trust, only to be given up in the event of X, Y, Z...)

Yes, it's a pain in the ass. But it would work, and it would mean your executor/spouse/etc would only have one set of people to convince that you're dead.

Comment: That's it. (Score 5, Interesting) 658

by Saint Aardvark (#37872740) Attached to: TSA's VIPR Bites Rail, Bus, and Ferry Passengers

I'm a Canadian sysadmin. I love -- LOVE -- the LISA conference (http://www.usenix.org/lisa11/). It's wonderful, informative, and fun; I've made great friends there, learned an incredible amount and generally enjoyed myself enormously.

Last year was the third time I went. The conference was in San Jose. I took a bus and a train -- which took over 24 hours -- from Vancouver to San Jose, rather than fly and go through a naked body scanner. I figured if I'm going to talk the talk, I should walk the walk.

I'd already decided to skip this year's conference; it's in Boston, which is a long way to go by train or bus. I didn't want to be away from my family for that long. But I had been thinking about going next year, when it's going to be in San Diego.

I'm not going now. Not if this crap keeps up. I'll watch the video on my workstation, I'll listen to the MP3s on the bus, and I'll stay here in Canada. We have problems of our own -- but random searches and "papers, please" for the crime of taking the goddamned train are not one of them.

I'll miss y'all.

Samsung plants keyloggers on laptops it makes->

Submitted by
Saint Aardvark
Saint Aardvark writes "Mohammed Hassan writes in Network World that he found a keylogger program installed on his brand-new laptop — not once, but twice. After initial denials, Samsung has admitted they did this, saying it was to "monitor the performance of the machine and to find out how it is being used." As Hassan says, "In other words, Samsung wanted to gather usage data without obtaining consent from laptop owners." Three PR officers from Samsung have so far refused comment."
Link to Original Source

Comment: The FSF got it right (Score 5, Insightful) 259

by Saint Aardvark (#35202234) Attached to: E-Book Lending Stands Up To Corporate Mongering

Still, I can't help but think: digital rights management, sure! Where are my rights, as a consumer, and who is managing them?"

And that is why the Free Software Foundation insists on calling this technology "Digital Restrictions Management (http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm): it points out that this is meant to keep YOU, the paying customer, from doing useful things with the stuff you buy.

"Never give in. Never give in. Never. Never. Never." -- Winston Churchill

Working...