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Comment Re:Misleading title !! (Score 1) 459

Stupid politicians like that can be found anywhere.
Recently (late February) a Danish politician, at the time legal policy spokesman for Konversative (Conservatives) Tom Behnke, (a former cop, by the way), argued that politicians from left-wing Enhedslisten (The Unity List/Red-Greens) and center-left Radikale Venstre (Radical Left) Line Barfoed and Manu Sareen shouldn't question the Danish logging directive (Logningsbekendtgørelsen). His reasoning? "Imagine a terrorist attack with 675,000 dead".

If that's that best a legal policy spokesman can come up with, I want to be a fucking politician. I'll lower the speed limits on the highway to 40 km/h, because "imagine a 400 school-bus pileup"... Sigh.

Comment Re:Sure I've heard of Ctrl+F ... (Score 2) 567

I guess it has some consistency -- the shortcuts are the same for Danish, and, I presume, Norwegian. But you're right. It bugs me when I occasionally is being forced to use Outlook/Word on a computer with a Danish locale. Screw all localization, let's just all agree on using English for computers. ...and force all Americans to use the international date format, ISO 8601.
Crime

Submission + - RSA Admits SecurID Tokens Have Been Compromised (net-security.org)

Orome1 writes: RSA has finally admitted publicly that the March breach into its systems has resulted in the compromise of their SecurID two-factor authentication tokens. The admission comes in the wake of cyber intrusions into the networks of three US military contractors: Lockheed Martin, L-3 Communications and Northrop Grumman — one of them confirmed by the company, others hinted at by internal warnings and unusual domain name and password reset process.

Comment Denmark has been doing this for years (Score 4, Interesting) 337

KODA, the Danish equivalent of RIAA, had a case in Højesteret (Danish High Court) in 2003 that basically said that when you're at work, the broadcast licence rules for companies is in effect, even if you're a single trucker in a truck.
Only a few articles in Danish media covered it then. Here's the official statement from KODA at the time and a Google translation here

(weird links in preview -- wonder how they'll look when I press submit...)

Comment Re:Nice to get this from slashdot (Score 3, Informative) 249

I guess it could be considered rude to speak something other than English here, so I'll provide a translation before I get lynched:

"It was actually covered by Ing.dk (online newspaper driven by a big Engineering Association in Denmark) last evening: http://translate.google.com/translate?tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fing.dk%2Fartikel%2F117178-post-danmark-klar-med-sms-frimaerker&act=url "

Comment Re:OpenNIC (Score 1) 220

I've been following it somewhat, but that wasn't really my point, but rather that the Internet exists outside the USA as well.
The OpenNIC servers I use reside in Germany, Sweden and UK. While I don't doubt the powers of the USA government, or the amount of pressure they can (and will if needed) put on foreign countries, I sincerely doubt that would be successful in taking down all OpenNIC servers at once.

Comment Re:OpenNIC (Score 1) 220

How? You are aware that US FCC can't regulate the whole of the internet, right?
At most it can try to block access to OpenNIC servers from the US, but then it's just a matter of a bit of tunneling DNS requests...

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