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Submission + - Secret anti-Linux message in FruitLoops commercial (youtube.com) 1

cmdr_tofu writes: Apparently Tux has made his way into this very strange Fruit Loops commercial as well as the concept of "sharing" and "theft". Is Microsoft the abominable snowman and Tux the secret weapon of thieves? Watch the youtube link to see a very strange commercial...

Comment Re:Passwords (Score 1) 438

Then you'll sit in jail. No one will care. Your friends will think you were an idiot for not just co-operating. Freedom just isn't a virtue in itself for most people any more.

You seem to have forgotten what rights we really have in the US.

You're advocating giving up all of my freedoms and rights, so I don't sit in jail? How is that a viable solution?

Cooperating with a ridiculous requirement that outright violates the rights and freedoms this country was based upon, is never going to work. It's precisely this kind of cooperation that got us in the mess we're already in.

I refuse to waive my rights out of fear, rather than stand up and defend them.

Remember, WE give the government it's rights and power, they don't give it to us.

You can continue to sit, fat and happy watching your American Idol and playing your PS3, but just remember who stood up for you and fought for your freedoms and rights, while you sat back and did nothing.

Comment Re:Passwords (Score 1) 438

BTW in the UK refusal to provide a password or passkey to decode an encrypted device is punishable with several years in jail. You have no right to remain silent in the UK, and it's beginning to look like the US is headed down the same path.

I'll take the jail time, thanks. I'm not going to let the threat of jail time compel me to revoke my own morals or those of generations of people who will come after me. It's our rights we're standing up for here.

I wrote a post about this over 5 years ago, when it first happened: http://blog.gnu-designs.com/no-you-may-not-have-my-encryption-keys

Comment Re:So each user is worth about $100? (Score 1) 228

Frankly, $100 ownership cost per victim is cheap. Compare to the cost of buying the SuperBowel in order to sell millions per minute TV commercials.

What is this "Advertisement" thing you speak of? I haven't seen a single ad on the web in at least a few years, thanks to some intelligent, learning plugins and Javascript plugins that restrict/prohibit them from ever being displayed to my eyes. They might get blocked at the request level, or get stashed in the cache and neutered in my web interface, but I haven't seen ads in a long, long time now.

And that's just the way I like it.

Comment Re:Ship Source? (Score 2) 198

The source you provide or link to must be the same source used to produce the binaries you're shipping on your device. In other words, if I take Google's source and build binaries with it, and those binaries differ from the ones shipping on your device, it's not the same source code, and does not comply with the license.

Pointing to a source for Android, is not the same thing as providing the source for the modifications to that source that you (as a vendor) have done to the source.

Comment Re:Lastpass (Score 1) 343

The only problem is that I cannot login to the websites on public computers, but I think that's an added security bonus. I have my Blackberry with me to check my email, which is what I really need to check on the road.

Sure you can... just install DropBox on your BlackBerry and/or use a password-accessible Dropbox URL that leads to your KeePassX.kdb file, and keep a copy of the portable KeePassX.exe file in there for those public terminals.

KeePassX also has a client for the BlackBerry, which I use all the time.

Comment Re:This should be modded up (Score 1) 609

...Not to mention a firmware update that bricked 1.6TB of my data, in a completely unrecoverable way. I was running a Drobo v2 with v.1.31 and had rebooted it hundreds of times in the last 2 years. There was a new firmware update that claimed to fix some performance issues. I upgraded the firmware (using the approved Windows method).

The device never booted again. It's been bricked for months now, and my data, while still striped across the platters, is held hostage by the Drobo device. Downgrading the firmware isn't possible, because the moment the firmware is updated (before the initial reboot of the device), the disk pack itself is upgrade to that same firmware revision.

There is no going back... and DRI openly states that I'm screwed, and there's nothing they can do. They can't even give me the "Last Resort Firmware" that they hand out in cases just like this. I've opened plenty of cases with them about it, and their response is "Sorry, you should have had your data on another Drobo as a backup."

I will never use a proprietary, black-box data storage solution again, ever.

10 years of digital photos, dozens of system backups, thousands of scanned documents long since gone, my entire music collection, etc. all stored on a device that claimed to be completely safe to store it.

Avoid Drobo at all costs, if you care about your data.

Comment Re:I've said it before, and I'll say it again.. (Score 1) 490

If you have a real solution to those two issues, I'd love to hear about it.

Well first, some of those Firefox add-ons actually send an encrypted blob through the web-based email system... so if you don't have the add-on, you get ascii-armored jibberish, with legible headers.

Also, the systems you mention all support IMAP and POP3, so you can use the mail client of your choice to interact with them (Evolution, Thunderbird, Outlook, OE, Mail.app, etc.)

Comment Re:Hold on... (Score 1) 490

If you send your email to somebody (the "third party") that somebody can choose to hand it over to anyone.

This is PRECISELY why you encrypt emails to recipients... there is absolutely no doubt that there was an expectation of privacy, when the receiver has to decrypt the email using a private key, to read it.

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