Comment Re:How about (Score 1) 528
Who cares?
Their future employers, etc.
Who cares?
Their future employers, etc.
Seriously, when did people become brain dead about stuff like this
It's called "puberty".
Or did nobody here not do stupid things when they were teenagers? Too busy playing video games...?
Back in those days, photos were taken on photographic film which had to be developed, and in 99.9% of cases by someone not taking the photo or in the photo. Therefore, someone else would see the nudey.
That's why Gentlemen Took Polaroids.
I'd like to see how he implemented his back-end. Did he rely upon tor's anonymity and get lazy in the private messaging system?
Tor won't help you much against an enemy that has many global taps into the Internet as the NSA has. They'll soon know exactly where messages originate and remove any "anonymity".
There's every reason to believe they can break the encryption, too.
http://gizmodo.com/the-nsa-can-probably-break-tors-encryption-keys-1273299782
We are an Incapsula customer and I can tell you we were NOT "completely unaffected".
Maybe you could call Sean Michael Kerner at eWeek and tell them Marc Gaffan was lying.
He's also on twitter: https://www.twitter.com/techjournalist
They don't name the site, they don't name the attacker, the customers were "completely unaffected"....they could be making it up for all we know.
And this, ladies and gentlemen, is what failing chemistry and geology class (and probably physics, too) looks like.
Take a peek in a mirror sometime.
Things in natural gas are "extracted" using distillation, helium among them.
Helium isn't "produced", it's "extracted".
"Produced" is when you make it. AFAIK we still haven't mastered alchemy.
Hmm, I suspect that the NSA isn't nearly as good as people are fearing, but how can we prove it?
We can't.
There was a time when the NSA was way ahead of civilians, eg. In the 1970s when they tweaked DES without telling anybody why - turns out they knew about differential cryptanalysis.
Since then the gap has closed. These days there's no reason to suppose they're much ahead of civilians (except in budget,getting people to sign pain-of-death NDAs, install "government approved" black boxes in telephone exchanges, drive around in black SUVs
I'd notice the fan noise...
Well perhaps the point isn't that any new algorithms are uncrackable
There's every reason to believe that they are. The NSA uses AES for its own encryption systems.
If there's a weakness it's in the implementations (are your numbers really random?) and/or compromised PCs that they're running on.
While I think that NIST related crypto algorithms are probably well compromised by the NSA
AES is one of the most independently studied/analyzed algorithms ever.
I suspect that there is probably not much of anything - certainly nothing on the open market - that the NSA would not already have cracked anyway.
Triple-DES?
They offer zero protection against chemtrails though.
The AES/Rijndael algorithm was independently designed. The number of rounds to be used and the key size decisions to make standardized versions of the algorithm for US Government use were made by NIST with input from the NSA.
Not 100% true. The NIST only messed with the 192 and 256 bit versions. Guess what? They turned out to be weak (and everybody knows about it).
If you're truly paranoid you could use Triple-DES instead of AES but there's no good reason not to trust 128-bit AES, it's one of the most analyzed/studied algorithms ever.
Block ciphers like AES can also be used as hash functions. SHA-n isn't really needed except for efficiency reasons (block cyphers are slower).
I am pretty sure that Helium is not produced from natural gas
Not 100% sure...?
fortune: No such file or directory