Comment Re:Wrong Solution! (Score 1) 240
Comment Re:Hmmm... (Score 1) 555
Comment Re:no expectation of privacy (Score 1) 490
There is no expectation of privacy in email
There may be NO privacy in email, but that doesn't mean there is no expectation of privacy.
Comment Horsepoop yourself. It's a contract (Score 1) 324
Comment A Generation Behind (Score 2, Insightful) 473
This is no different than when IE8 was released and IE finally supported CSS 2.1 when all the other browser vendors had.
Webkit, specifically Safari, has been leading the way in CSS innovation & Javascript performance with each release with Chrome slightly behind. Firefox & Opera seem to be battling it out for third place and IE, of course is always an entire generation behind.
Comment Re:Email is like Postcards.... (Score 1) 490
Want privacy? Encrypt the actual message itself.
So in order to view an email you must:
1 Log into a computer
2 pull up an email program
3 authenticate with the server
4 download a copy from the server
5 read the email.
I can certainly see how adding one extra step
4.5 Open the email (decrypt or de-envelope)
Is the BIG step that you think is necessary to imply an expectation of privacy. So, why is it that 4 distinct steps is not sufficient to be considered no expectation of privacy, but 1 extra step is?
And what if the encryption is ROT13? is that sufficient? Or if someone is good enough to have memorized it and can read such a message rote do you no longer have any expectation of privacy?
The simple fact of the matter, is that the concept of an expectation of privacy is based upon the concept of what a person may observe with their own senses and not going out of their way to acquire that information. It is EXACTLY why it is NOT legal to use IR cameras to spy into buildings even though all that juicy IR information is beaming right out of the homes.
You can not read an email without technical assistance. That's all the envelope that is necessary.
Comment Re:Firefox not playing h264 is a political decisio (Score 1) 473
Comment Re:103000 passwords per second. So? (Score -1) 215
[a-z0-9]{8} Yields 36^8, or 2821109907456.
Must contain at least 1 number means you subtract all those that don't (26^8). Must contain at least 1 non-number (I'm assuming this is also a restriction) means you subtract all those that don't (10^8).
You're down to 2612182842880.
Other specific restrictions (can't be the user name, can't be last password, can't be 1234abcd) will have very little effect. Let's call it 2500000000000.
At 100000 per second, we have 25000000 seconds, or 9 and a half months to crack a password.
Odds are you'll crack it in 1/2 that time, so you've got 4-5 months.
Simply require users to change their password every 6 months and you're safe enough.
An attacker would have to:
- Know when a user changes his password.
- Get the hash immediately.
- Know the encryption scheme used.
- Crack non stop without the video card melting.
- Have about a 60% chance of getting it before the user is required to change their password again.
It's doable, but anyone who would be the target of such an attack would likely have:
- A better bank
- FDIC-insured investments
- Lawyers with very expensive suits
But why are we talking about cracking passwords when we should be discussing the root of the problem? Someone done accessed ur shit and got ur password file, foo!
Comment Replacable batteries? (Score 1) 240
Why not just develop a design to swap out batteries through an automated crane? Pull in, the robot arm removes your empty battery and replaces it with a full one. The empty battery charges at whatever pace the 'gas' station deems necessary (maybe overnight when prices are lower) and the driver has a full charge within seconds. I'm almost certain I saw this idea put forth on
Comment Guitar playing robots (Score 2, Funny) 133
Comment Re:atlanta (Score 1) 882
Comment Re:Just imagine... (Score 2, Insightful) 174
Also, you're really overreacting, for the record.
Comment Re:Just imagine... (Score 2, Insightful) 174
I have well over 250 CDs, and I enjoy almost all of them from start to finish, and my list grows larger every month. I contend that the problem isn't with music at large, but with your devouring of what the radio shovels into you.
Comment Re:Drove over 800 miles in last three days (Score 1) 319
The US is actually quite large, my state is larger than England by more than 7,000 miles, and I often find myself needing to transport more than just myself.
Don't get me wrong here, I actually like the sound of a car that gets (supposedly) 300 miles to the gallon, it's just not practical for most road trip situations, because you're usually caring yourself and and at least some stuff or other people.