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Comment Re:Credit cards? (Score 1) 80

Tell them you would just like to go ahead and cancel your account. If they don't waive the fee, you should. There are many banks and alternatives. BTW, stop using a debit card for anything other than an ATM. If your debit card is compromised, they get your money. If your credit card is compromised, they get the credit card companies money. Which do you think is easier to deal with?

Comment White vs. Gray vs. Black (Score 1) 146

In my opinion, the best description of the differences between these three classes of hackers is the following:

White hat: They will only use their knowledge for defensive capabilities. Creating a new virus in a lab setting that is only used to improve mitigation techniques would still be defensive measure.

Gray hat: They will do offensive hacking, but only when they feel it is for a moral purpose. Breaking into a database or website to track down "bad" people is a great example of moral ambiguity that falls into the gray category.

Black hat: They will break things for fun and profit.

If you accept these definitions, the actions described in the article are definitely not white hat. As a matter of fact, if you actually RTFA the title is "Black ops: how HBGary wrote backdoors for the government" I did not see any mention of white hat in the article.

Aside from the poor choice of words in the /. headline, I don't see the big deal. I did not see anything outside what I would assume is normal.

I thought the coolest insight was how Greg Hoglund does some of his research.

Comment Re:This is will never fly in the courts (Score 1) 395

There is significant precedent in copyright law that lists of facts or data cannot be copyrighted.

See, e.g. Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Service Co., 499 U.S. 340 (1991) Link

That's great. Mr. Schoenfeld may eventually win. But I see the real problem here is a government funded entity "going after" the little guy for something absolutely absurd. MTA has unlimited funds. (thanks to the bottomless pockets of taxpayers) Mr. Schoenfeld may go bankrupt proving his innocence.

Comment Does it really matter? (Score 3, Insightful) 1515

I joined the military to pay my way through college. My family always stressed the importance of education. After spending all that time getting a bachelor's in IT, I'm worse off than my uneducated parents. I frequently think I would have been much better off being a plumber or an electrician. At least those jobs require a license, some skill and can't be sent overseas. (i.e. manufacturing and IT) What good is an education if no one will pay you to use it?
Security

The Inside Story On the San Francisco Network Hijacking 471

snydeq writes "A source with direct knowledge of San Francisco's IT infrastructure has tipped off Paul Venezia to the real story behind Terry Childs' lockout of San Francisco's network, providing a detailed account of the city's FiberWAN, interdepartmental politics, and Terry Childs himself. Childs pleaded not guilty to charges of tampering yesterday and is being held on $5 million bail. According to the source, Childs' purview was limited to the city's FiberWAN — a network he himself built and, believing no one competent enough to touch the network but himself, guarded religiously, sharing details with no one, including routing configuration and log-in information. Childs was so concerned about the network's security that he refused even to write router and switch configurations to flash. But what may prove difficult for the prosecution in its case against Childs is that his restricted access to the network was widely known and accepted among managers and the city's other network engineers. Venezia, who has been suspicious of the official story from the start, suspects that the Childs case may be that 'of an overprotective admin who believed he was protecting the network — and by extension, the city — from other administrators whom he considered inferior, and perhaps even dangerous.' Further evidence is that fact that the network, from what Venezia understands, has been running smoothly since Childs' arrest."
Security

Diebold Patch May Be Evidence of '02 Election Tampering 526

An anonymous reader writes "Stephen Spoonamore, founder of IT security firm Cybrinth and former advisor to John McCain, claims he has new evidence of election tampering by Diebold in the 2002 Georgia gubernatorial and senate races. A whistleblower gave Spoonamore a patch that was applied to Diebold machines in person by the Diebold CEO. Spoonamore confirmed that the patch did not correct the clock problem it supposedly addressed, but contained two parallel programs. Without access to the hardware, he could not learn more. He reported his findings to the Justice Department, which has not acted."

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