
The best passwords I've found are sentences translated into passwords. For example:
My phone number is 555-234-2344 : Mp#i555-234-2344
I live at 2202 Park Street : Il@2202PSt
Although a valid idea, your first examples are very BAD ones. NEVER use personal information to build passwords. That said, this is a very common foible. All advanced cracker systems (NSA et. al.) use personal historic information in large quantities to create these types of passwords.
Risk is the price of freedom, and the sooner people learn this, the sooner we can move on to improving our civilization.
Taking on certain risks is indeed a price of freedom, but that doesn't mean one shouldn't reduce certain risks as much as possible and then accept the rest. Not reducing those risks that can be reduced without much negative impact on the desired outcome is simply irresponsible. However, the opposite extreme, never doing anything in order to minimize risk is indeed a problem. It's just not the whole problem. Choosing appropriately what risks to accept and which to avoid or reduce is the name of the game. Risk management is the formal study of it and for the most part people are bad at it. By natural human tendencies we underestimate familiar risks like car crashes and over estimate unfamiliar or extreme risks like dying in a plane crash.
In fact a good argument has been made that all progress of civilization boils down to reducing risk. A much lower percentage of the worlds population is at risk of starving to death or even not having enough food each day than perhaps any time in history. In the developed world few people spend much time worrying whether the lights will come on when they flip the switch and whether they will be able to get to work. This reduction of risk where the basics are continually taken care of to a greater degree so that less and less critical things can be focused on is essential to progress. In fact, it basically means more people can spend more time on arts, science, mathematics, or whatever else productive they want that is enabled by the reduced risk of having basic and even not so basic necessities like food and energy.
... And Modern Warfare 2 hasn't caused a skyrocket in enlistment,
Except in the 9 year old age range
lol
US republicans (and democrats) with their sub set of wacky right wing christian religious nuts are very quick to forget their anti communist beliefs when money is involved.
Even the more educated Slashdot crowd is very "pragmatic" with China.
China sucks not because it is a communist state, it sucks because it is a police state. But who cares, if we can make a buck, we can all ignore in bliss the Chinese government's peccadilloes.
Fascist, communist, fake democratic national security states (Australia/UK/Russia/USA etc.), all the same crap. Sell your soul for your bank owned plastic McMansion and your cool cars. Let's just leave it to the "free" market, who cares about politics anyway.
1) Put cameras and microphones everywhere, for our "protection"
2) Don't share the video/audio outside your circle of power
3) Train computers to recognize your enemies
4) Know their secrets and whereabouts
5) Blackmail, murder and kidnap at will
If it doesn't happen under the current administration, it could happen under another.
If it doesn't happen in America, it will happen elsewhere (if it hasn't already).
This technology is a Pandora's box.
Greenbaum is the social media editor at the newspaper. A while back he posted the results of a survey which showed that:
61% of his readers did not want the editors deciding what comments were offensive
Given his response to the comments on the article, I don't think he's any closer to understanding what he was told the first time.
Well so is Dasani and so what. There is money in providing a convenience to people. You see this all over the grocery store. Buy skinless, boneless chicken breast and you pay for the convenience for not having to do the work yourself of buying a whole chicken and skinning and boning it.
It's also misleading to simply say it's filtered tap water. I saw a show on Dasani and it's filtered so well and becomes so pure it doesn't taste good to most people. So, if you look on the bottle you'll see that they ADD back in minerals and such to make it taste good again.
I have helped with OpenVZ and mysqlBind/unxsBind/iDNS. What I liked the most is that you don't need to be an expert kernel hacker to provide value. And the unxsVZ source code is very easy to read and code for. Since they use academic UK style C indentation and not the K&R classic style.
"Been through Hell? Whaddya bring back for me?" -- A. Brilliant