Foot and Mouth Virus and Outlook 163
Alright, maybe it's the media saturation of "foot and mouth" disease/virus which seems quite similar to the LOVEBUG frenzy, or maybe it's just the bio major in me - but "the report" from the CDC concerning Outlook Express and foot-and-mouth made me spew coffee out of my nose.
HOLY SHIT! (Score:1)
That must've been pretty funny to make your coffee enema come out your nose!
I thought... (Score:1)
Re:Time to change? (Score:1)
Re:The Brits are always too stupid to stop and thi (Score:1)
It is actually possible to vaccinate against this disease, however this merely makes the animal immune to a certain strain and does not stop a herd from carrying the disease, so if an animal comes into contact with an unvaccinated herd, it will infect the herd. Obviously vaccines also wear off, and there are numerous strains to account for. It is not practicable.
Previous polices of vaccination in Europe have failed because it doesn't prevent animals from spreading the disease, and therefore gives possibilities for different strains to emerge. Anyway, as with the 1967 outbreak, current policy is to purely eradicate the disease through slaughter and pyres, however ghastly they may seem. European policy has followed British policy of eradication.
As for that 1600 deg F bit, I think you're getting mixed up with prions from BSE infected animals, these proteins can sustain high temperatures. BSE or "mad cow" is different from foot and mouth.
I know what's going on may seen daft to you, however you have to understand these people know what they're doing and the actions have logical explanations. If the disease could sustain fire then there wouldn't be burning, please give people a little credit before denouncing based conjecture and assumptions.
Re:The funny thing about the real foot-and-mouth.. (Score:1)
--
Correction (Score:1)
The morons you mention decided this because otherwise EU meat could not be exported to several non-EU countries (including the US). Morons indeed. Everywhere.
--
Does this mean... (Score:1)
Shame. That's what's happening a few miles from my house to Foot and Mouth victims.
Is the EU to blame? (Score:1)
How many of the EU's policies are to blame for this epidemic? It used to be that livestock diseases were a local phenomenon affecting only local expendable populations. But now, with the advent first of railroads and then trucks and planes, we're seeing diseases carried far beyond these bucolic borders and into the urban centers we ourselves inhabit.
So far, the EU hasn't taken any bold new steps to stem the tide, so what are we tolerating them for? They were supposed to stand for an image of a united Europe, but all they've managed to do is breed dissention and economic uncertainty with the collapse of the euro. How can we take a government seriously when its presidency exists on a rotating basis (to Sweden, of all places)? And what sort of united face have they put on the great animal and human suffering caused by this virus?
The foot-and-mouth epidemic is the great test the EU must face in order to have some sort of legitimacy on the world scene. If other countries see that the EU and Europe are vulnerable to biological warfare like this, then there's no telling what sort of military or terrorist actions they might decide to engage themselves in.
The future of Europe as an economic and political superpower is hinging on the cloven hooves of our ovine and bovine brethren.
Re:Ironic (Score:1)
Don't go blaming Linux (an OS kernel) for a userspace package's vulnerability. Besides, shouldn't you be having BIND switch to non-root UID and GID, and probably in a chroot()ed jail?
_____
Re:Ironic (Score:1)
Go read the security advisory on bugtraq or CERT.org that talks about the weakness in BIND that the Lion worm is exploiting. It's an error in the way BIND handles TSIGs. Hey - I'll make it easy for you [cert.org].
How about next time you read the security advisories. Just because the worm's for Linux, doesn't mean the vulnerability it uses to get where it's going is only on one platform.
_____
Foot-and-Mouth (Score:3)
Oh, sorry - I thought it said "foot IN mouth."
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:2)
I'm not sure whey they aren't doing massive vacinations, but I'm not sure that there is an effective vacine for this.
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:2)
Why has the world decided that Vacinations are a bad thing anyhow. I mean thanks the people like Jonas Salk we no longer have to worry about polio and a lot of other things that used to kill and maim millions of people.
BTW I found out the other day that Salk never patented the vacine for polio because he wanted it to be used as widly as posible. Real Meanch.
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:1)
Your points about the EU are just as valid in other parts of the world too.
Re:Funny ? Not really. Dangerous to the USA (Score:1)
Re:No, it's carnivorism (Score:1)
Meat is also cruel to people. If people stopped eating meat and feeding grain to animals, there would be enough food to feed the world.
Huh? There's obviously enough food available to feed the world already. Witness the ever-increasing population. The simple truth is that people are made of food. Just enough food means no population increase. Likewise, too much food means it's possible for the population to increase, which it's done since time immemorial. If you want everybody fed, perhaps you should try showing the hungry how to be self-sufficient, or making food distribution a little easier.
Try again.
--- Chris
Re:Actually there is a serious side (Score:2)
This link maybe? (Score:2)
I removed the "
Re:I'll bite. (Score:2)
"Wake up dead."
It's a joke people, I didn't think anyone would interpret that literally.
Re:I'll bite. (Score:2)
OK, I was wrong, Anthrax is not especially contagious... but it is quick!
Thanks for the insightful mod though :)
Re:I'll bite. (Score:4)
It's quick and highly contagious. Some bacterial infections can be very dangerous because of those characteristics... bacteria are much more robust and eager destroyers of body tissue than viruses, if less insidious. Victims of bacterial meningitis sometimes go to sleep with what they think is just a headache and wake up dead. Victims of flesh-eating bacteria sometimes have limbs amputated to save them from an uncurable spreading necrosis.
Underestimate the mighty bacteria at your peril.
Re:I'll bite. (Score:1)
But what scares me most is prions. It's the bug in mad cow disease. It is the hardest to destroy.
Except that prions are not bugs, they are proteins. Thus, they cannot be "killed", only rendered non-infectious via combustion or with certain solvents.Re:They're slaughtering my e-mail! (Score:1)
Re:I'll bite. (Score:1)
While I'm not speaking from experience waking up dead isn't that bad. I mean granted you might feel hungry for brains and there is that whole moaning thing, but you can still do pretty much everything. Granted people will keep trying to bury you, but let them have their fun. You can always dig your way out later.
Re:Funny ? Not really. Dangerous to the USA (Score:1)
Re:The Brits are always too stupid to stop and thi (Score:1)
Britain is a member of the EU. There are rules and regulations that GB *must* follow under these sort of circumstances. One of those is that the number of infected animals must be available for inspection up to 1 week later by "officials". Another is that the destruction should take place by burning if possible. GB unfortunately has been following these rules to the letter. It will almost certainly be the downfall of the livestock industry in this country.
It seems that "Foolish Youngster" is living up to his (her?) name. The Brits are not being stupid, they're just (for once) adhering to the law. Perhaps we have too high a respect for an (obviously stupid) law, but that's not to say we agree with it, it's just that we adhere to it. There is a common saying in GB: "The law is an ass". What it means is that there is always a circumstance where the law is obviously stupid.
Show me the farmer brave enough to step out of line during this crisis though and tell the law where to go. Lose your insurance. Lose your farm. Destroy your livelihood. Would you ? If you would, it's not just the law that's an ass. The press would have a field day...
Simon.
Re:Actually there is a serious side (Score:2)
-Matt
Re:No, it's carnivorism (Score:1)
rocketscientist.
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:2)
Incidently, hoof/foot and mouth is often not fatal by itself, but causes animals to lose weight and generally become unsalable/unproductive. Also, in animals that have recovered, you have the same antibodies/contagion problem you have with vaccines. The virus is very very contagious -- a human can pass it on simply by walking through a field where an infected animal has been, and then walking through another field where a non-infected animal will be soon.
Some useful links:
The Gaurdian's Information on Foot and Mouth Disease [guardian.co.uk]
An Editorial, with information about when humans catch foot and mouth Foot and mouth disease: the human consequences [bmj.com](yes, it can happen, it's very rare and not really dangerous)
BTW, Foot and mouth is not yet found in the U.S.
Yet may be the key word here, however. If it gets here, it could not only affect domestic animals, but also deer and other hooved wild life.
Blame the Brits and Danes! (Score:1)
And that's how it happened that Margareth Thatcher was first responsible for BSE and now at least partially for the outbreak of Foot and Mouth....
Remarkable is that the present British government does not entertain the option to return to the safe policy of vaccination eventhough it looks like the disease has already wiped out any profit that's made in the last ten years. The Dutch have made a profit in the Japanese marked but wish to return to vaccination for the benefit of animal health.
No.. (Score:2)
F&M Has *nothing* to do with BSE.
Also, BSE *IS* Mad Cow Disease, called Scrapie in sheep, and Cru(can't spell)-Jacob disease in humans (CJD)
I also don't think this is kuru... though kuru is also a prion disease.
Prions spread chiefly through cannibalism, yes. Foot&Mouth is highly contagious, also airborne. Hence the mad quarantining. The mad cow outbreak was due to the forced cannibalism of the cows.... they cattle feed contained rendered cattle.
Re:I'll bite. (Score:2)
I'll bite. (Score:4)
F&M is viral, Anthrax is bacterial.
F&M is not dangerous to humans. Anthrax is.
enterprise apps (Score:1)
OUTBREAK OF CONTAGIOUS DISEASE IN JAPAN (Score:1)
Story No. 4645. By Claire Swires
TOKYO, JAPAN March 10 AFP - Japanese authorities hve banned all animal movements in and out of the country after several sofa beds were found nibbled in Tokyo today.
Experts believe this may be an outbreak of the dreaded Futon Mouse Disease.
--Gfunk
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:1)
Which is why they're trying to avoid vaccinations. It would decimate the livelyhood of farmers even more.
Re:I eat a cheeseburger in your general direction (Score:2)
How true. After being a Ovo-lacto vegetarian my whole life (28 years and counting) I've never had meat (I did give up fish when I was 4). I am amazed at how many people who tell me that its an unhealthy way of life and you can't last long at it. My favorite story was an ex-girlfriend who was also Vegetarian. Her mother took who to the doctor and asked him to try to explain how bad it is. The doctor looked at the mother and said "Its done fine for me for the part 35 years."
Heck, even my fiance is convinced I'm going to just curl up in the corner and die (despite the fact that when she dragged me to the gym I was able to run her into the ground).
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:2)
Incorrect (Score:1)
Kuru was originally thought to be spread by ritual cannibalism, most (not all) people do not believe that now. Rather in the particular tribes your talking about, the woman do the burial preparations, which also involve doing something (?) to the brain. If you get a cut on your hand when you're doing this (very likely) it can be transmitted.
Re:I'll bite. (Score:1)
Re:I eat a cheeseburger in your general direction (Score:1)
Re:No, it's carnivorism (Score:2)
That's not true at all. We have evolved from tree climbers. If you are going to go from branch to branch, you want binocular vision so that you can accuratly judge the distance. You'll find binocular vision in lemurs, squirrels, and other similar creatures.
Re:It might be the real Budweiser (Score:2)
So nobody sued anyone.
Boss of nothin. Big deal.
Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.
Re:Actually there is a serious side (Score:2)
Re:Ironic (Score:2)
Re:No, it's carnivorism (Score:1)
FunOne
Re:I eat a cheeseburger in your general direction (Score:2)
Well, "omnivorous" is a broad term; it can be mostly a flesh based diet with occasional plants, or a plant based diet with occasional mean. Our digestive system is certainly not suited to a meat-centered diet, and we can do quite well without any meat at all.
Of our closest primate relatives, gorillas are pretty much herbivorous, though I think they'll sometimes eat bugs; chimps will occasionally hunt small mammals, but IIRC they focus more on plants and bugs. So if we want to talk about "natural" diets for humans, we should probably be eating more bugs.
It's not. No more tricky than a balanced diet of any other sort. Sure, you can eat bad as a vegetarian; a diet of french fries and potato chips may be veggie, but it ain't healthy.
I've been a vegetarian of varying degrees for nineteen years, and a vegan for eleven. I keep encountering people who tell me that my diet must lacking vital nutrients and I'm going to keel over any day now, but in reality my health is pretty good.
Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | http://www.infamous.net/
Re:Time to change? (Score:1)
to be able to happen nowadays.
Copy our content and we'll sue!
etc, etc...
Re:Reports Claim (Score:1)
Re:I'll bite. (Score:2)
Well, at least they wake up. How dead can they be?
;)
Re:Broken link... (Score:1)
Hemos had make us all look like some FP kiddies,... But he is one too
Anyway you could recommend the story to everybody with this link http://www.satirewire.com/cgibin/birdcast.cgi [satirewire.com]
Broken link... (Score:2)
The page is slashdoted anyway...
What is outlook sripting for? (Score:2)
I used to get a bit of a chuckle from all of the MS Office macro viri running around. I always found it funny that no questions were ever raised (outside of
Outlook scripting on the other hand I have never actually seen. I have never heard of anyone using it and I don't fully understand exactly what its' for. A rather handy feature that unfortunately exposes you to potential security risks I understand but an utterly useless feature that nobody uses? WTF?
Has anybody ever seen anything at all that actually uses scripting in Outlook?
Re:No, it's carnivorism (Score:2)
Moderator on crack (Score:2)
--
Reports Claim (Score:2)
Re:YAY! I LOST KARMA WOOHOO (Score:1)
Re:I eat a cheeseburger in your general direction (Score:2)
So eat your vegetables and enjoy. I'm going to tuck into a nice steak, thanks.
Re:No, it's carnivorism (Score:1)
Aye, your evolutionary theory needs a tweaking. Why would humans have canine teeth (which are designed for ripping and severing meet) if they had evolved to eat plants and nuts and such? Those types of food would exert a selective pressure on man to develope wider, bigger teeth, with bigger muscular attachments than we have now. The person who stated that we have evolved to be omnivorous is completely correct.
I will, however, agree with you that man's digestive track is not used to eating large amounts of meat at a time, but the quantity that qualifies as large is somewhere in the order of 2 to 3 pounds. I don't know many people who can eat 2 to 3 pounds of meat in one sitting without vomiting. Man *IS* evolved to eat meat, as evident by the meat specific enzymes used to break it down in our digestive tracks.
-SeanActually there is a serious side (Score:5)
The same with Operating Systems. The dominance of Microsoft and in particular their insecure mail client causes more trouble that it would otherwise if there was a variety out the.
Reducing the number of species/platforms, which is which what markets forces do is actually not good economic sense.
Medic! (Score:1)
Oh no! It appears that Hemos has already been infected!
--
Nice Post (Score:1)
No milk today... (Score:1)
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:1)
There are discussions going on to do it anyway.
Re:and the point of this stupid article? (Score:2)
"One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad
Re:I'll bite. (Score:1)
How to avoid seeing funny articles (Score:2)
-- fencepost
Re:Actually there is a serious side (Score:1)
However, even in asexually reproducing populations of vertebrates you'd probably find more genetic diversity than in some areas of the current monoculture livestock practices, so the above guy is right - we have too little diversity, which is why this non-fatal disease is so scary - if it really does get totally "loose", then you'd see almost every livestock animal get it quickly, instead of just some getting it and some fighting it off. As the argument goes, anyway.
ooky
"My namesake medallion
Sez never trust a HAL 9000...." -bboys
Re:Actually there is a serious side (Score:1)
That being said, I agree with the fear of a monoculture, but I'm more concerned about entire states filled with a single species of corn or wheat and an airborne (or insect) plague wiping them out.
VTP might just be possable (Score:3)
Think of it. The shere idea of it rings in money! I bet 98% of the virus writers out there work for a anti-virus company. Think of the market share
No doubt Microsoft would cash in on the deal and build a mass email system with a built-in virus transfer protocal.
No doubt they made AxtiveX insecure. Where does everyone go? That's right Windows Update a web based ActiveX control. Now when ever you update Microsoft get privlaged access to your machine.
It's all part of the big picture. The appocalypse
"Oh my, what is that?"
"Is it a bird?"
"Is it a plane?"
"No, It's a flamming gerbal!?"
"Oh My Gods! It's Amageddon!"
"Remember, who is the boss of you!"
Re:Budweiser! (Score:2)
Besides, American Budweiser is quite popular in England. I've seen people riding the train with a case of the familiar red-and-white cans alongside them, guzzling away. My theory was that the beer enjoys "import" status over there.
Re:Time to change? (Score:2)
After all, what is there to discuss if we cannot even follow the link in the story?
What makes you think people here actually read the stories before they start discussing?
Mod parent up. (Score:1)
Re:I'd love to read the "story" (Score:1)
Distributed.net Foot-and-Mouth PR (Score:1)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Several distributed.net participants have expressed their concern with regard to the distributed.net client and the recent outbreaks of Foot-and-Mouth disease.
Some members asked if they could moove their computer with the cow client on it, others were afraid to flush the cow, and thus spreading the disease around the world, even to the master servers of distributed.net in the United States.
distributed.net's CCO (Chief Cow Officer) Jeff Lawson acted swiftly and called his high school buddy EU Food Safety Commissioner Mr David Byrne. Mr Byrne went great ways to grant distributed.net an exception to the very strict transportation ban currently in place in large parts of Western Europe.
distributed.net assures its members they can go on and flush as ever before. There is no need to slaughter (kill -9) their cattle or let the flushed blocks go to /dev/cesspool, as recommended by various national
governments in Western Europe. Also, piling up blocks and transport them
only after the crisis is over is strongly deprecated.
distributed.net wants to make very clear that the recent disease in some cows, dubbed the "8012-flaw", has nothing to do with the initial outbreak of Foot-and-Mouth disease in England earlier this month, despite of rumors circulating the internet.
If you suspect your cow is infected with the virus and want to be on the safe side, go to http://www.distributed.net/trojans.html and download our 'wormfree' program. Be advised, though, that in most parts of the world, virus vaccination of cows is forbidden! distributed.net will in no case accept liability when participants get fined because of illegal vaccination.
Re:Is the EU to blame? (Score:2)
Was wondering when this would happen (Score:1)
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page [cavalrypilot.com]
Re:I'll bite. (Score:1)
Re:Coffee out the nose? (Score:1)
That lady got 10,000,000 for spilling coffe on her ankle.
hmmm, hot coffee, I'd finally be able to afford that G4...
---
Re:Foot-and-Mouth (Score:1)
Man, if I had my mod points....
---
Re:Post of Page: (Score:1)
Also one should repost always as a AC, unless he really want to prove he's a (stupid) karma whore.
guillaume
Re:Funny ? Not really. Dangerous to the USA (Score:1)
And, you know, this whole thing is incredibly funny anyway. The media is trumping it up like it's the second-freakin-coming of Mad Cow Disease and it isn't even particularly dangerous to us. It's a royal pain in the ass to farmers, of course, but it's not a problem for people...
(In your case, it would be more appropriate to call it foot-*IN*-mouth disease... damn right wing isolationist pseudopatriotic nutjobs give all us Merkins a bad name...)
/Brian
I eat a cheeseburger in your general direction (Score:2)
/Brian
Re:I eat a cheeseburger in your general direction (Score:2)
/Brian
Re:Funny ? Not really. Dangerous to the USA (Score:2)
/Brian
Re:Reports Claim (Score:2)
You had better throw out that mouse, reformat the drive and make sure you degaus your monitor too. You can never be too sure.
Re:How to avoid seeing funny articles (Score:2)
Go to your back, then scroll down until you find your ass. Once there place your hands firmly on your ass cheecks and push. You should hear a loud popping sound as your head becomes dislodged. You are now free to experience humor and laugh.
...Ya know I don't think he'll find this funny either, but oh well.
Re:foot and mouth (Score:2)
Post of Page: (Score:2)
UNABLE TO SPREAD THROUGH MICROSOFT OUTLOOK
Researchers Shocked to Finally Find Virus That Email App Doesn't Like
Atlanta, Ga. (SatireWire.com) -- Scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Symantec's AntiVirus Research Center today confirmed that foot-and-mouth disease cannot be spread by Microsoft's Outlook email application, believed to be the first time the program has ever failed to propagate a major virus.
"Frankly, we've never heard of a virus that couldn't spread through Microsoft Outlook, so our findings were, to say the least, unexpected," said Clive Sarnow, director of the CDC's infectious disease unit.
The study was immediately hailed by British officials, who said it will save millions of pounds and thousands of man hours. "Up until now we have, quite naturally, assumed that both foot-and-mouth and mad cow were spread by Microsoft Outlook," said Nick Brown, Britain's Agriculture Minister. "By eliminating it, we can focus our resources elsewhere."
However, researchers in the Netherlands, where foot-and-mouth has recently appeared, said they are not yet prepared to disqualify Outlook, which has been the progenitor of viruses such as "I Love You," "Bubbleboy," "Anna Kournikova," and "Naked Wife," to name but a few.
Said Nils Overmars, director of the Molecular Virology Lab at Leiden University: "It's not that we don't trust the research, it's just that as scientists, we are trained to be skeptical of any finding that flies in the face of established truth. And this one flies in the face like a blind drunk sparrow."
Executives at Microsoft, meanwhile, were equally skeptical, insisting that Outlook's patented Virus Transfer Protocol (VTP) has proven virtually pervious to any virus. The company, however, will issue a free VTP patch if it turns out the application is not vulnerable to foot-and-mouth.
Such an admission would be embarrassing for the software giant, but Symantec virologist Ariel Kologne insisted that no one is more humiliated by the study than she is. "Only last week, I had a reporter ask if the foot-and-mouth virus spreads through Microsoft Outlook, and I told him, 'Doesn't everything?'" she recalled. "Who would've thought?"
Re:Time to change? (Score:2)
They're slaughtering my e-mail! (Score:5)
So, they piled up all my mail in an enormous pile, waited several weeks to allow a horrible stentch to issue forth, and then burned it.
What has the world come to? [ridiculopathy.com]
I got this virus!! (Score:2)
Dudez!! Check out this l337 \/iru5, it r0x0rz. k thx.
This email didn't seem unusual because my friend calls himself a "h4x0r", and apparently they type like that. I wish I could be a "h4x0r" but my friend just sez I'm a "AOLamer". Anyway, I opened up the "CertainDeath.txt.vbs" file and my screen went nuts!!
There were all these flashing pictures and bad music and all of a sudden some large letters flashed on the screen:
All your beef are belong to us
I'd love to read the "story" (Score:2)
By the way, I think foot in mouth is a good look for Microsoft a lot of the time...
Re:No, it's carnivorism (Score:2)
From the Principia Discordia, Commandment 3 of the Pentabarf:
Warning!! (Score:2)
This message has 1 attachment(s):
*moo.jpg
Opening attachment...
=P
-Kasreyn
Outlook to carry Foot-in-Mouth virus (Score:5)
The Foot-in-Mouth virus is a particularly embarrassing one, which scans all the email you have sent and received with a particular contact, getting a good sense of your relationship with that person. It then sends a series of emails in your name to that contact saying many things you would be very embarrassed about later.
The effects of this virus are very similar to those produced by the psychological condition "Typing while drunk", and researchers are working very hard to examine whether any causal link exists between the this virus, its bovin cousin and alcohol-induced computer use.
Re:VTP might just be possable (Score:2)
Re:Actually there is a serious side (Score:2)
It does make good sense up to a certain point, though. While diversity is a good thing, compatability is also an equally good thing. (Get out your first year History text book and look up "interchangable parts.") Imagine trying to buy software if there were 40 different equally popular OSs on the market. Too much variety will bite you on the ass just as surely as no variety will.
Re:Time to change? (Score:2)
Hey, you were the same person complaining about the religious overtone in Katz article yesterday.
If you don't like Slashdot, leave, you religious-fanatic-prude, computer illiterate troll who has nothing insightful to contribute other then voicings of his own dissatisfaction with whatever is offerred on what is becomming a peice of shit website due to needlessly present fucks like you (along with other factors that will not be discussed herein.)
Ironic (Score:4)
--
"May the forces of evil become confused on the way to your house"