Submission + - Amazon Requires Non-Compete Agreements...For Warehouse Workers
During employment and for 18 months after the Separation Date, Employee will not, directly or indirectly, whether on Employee’s own behalf or on behalf of any other entity (for example, as an employee, agent, partner, or consultant), engage in or support the development, manufacture, marketing, or sale of any product or service that competes or is intended to compete with any product or service sold, offered, or otherwise provided by Amazon (or intended to be sold, offered, or otherwise provided by Amazon in the future)....
Submission + - Big Vulnerability in Hotel Wi-Fi Router Puts Guests at Risk (wired.com)
The vulnerability, which was discovered by Justin W. Clarke of the security firm Cylance, gives attackers read-write access to the root file system of the ANTlabs devices.
The discovery of the vulnerable systems was particularly interesting to them in light of an active hotel hacking campaign uncovered last year by researchers at Kaspersky Lab. In that campaign, which Kaspersky dubbed DarkHotel
Submission + - Passphrases You Can Memorize That Even The NSA Can't Guess 2
After you’ve generated your passphrase, the next step is to commit it to memory.You should write your new passphrase down on a piece of paper and carry it with you for as long as you need. Each time you need to type it, try typing it from memory first, but look at the paper if you need to. Assuming you type it a couple times a day, it shouldn’t take more than two or three days before you no longer need the paper, at which point you should destroy it. "Simple, random passphrases, in other words, are just as good at protecting the next whistleblowing spy as they are at securing your laptop," concludes Lee. "It’s a shame that we live in a world where ordinary citizens need that level of protection, but as long as we do, the Diceware system makes it possible to get CIA-level protection without going through black ops training"
Submission + - GNOME 3.16 Released (gnome.org)
Submission + - Win or lose, discrimination suit is having an effect on Silicon Valley (latimes.com)
"People are second-guessing and questioning whether there are exclusionary practices [and] everyday subtle acts of exclusion that collectively limit women's ability to succeed or even to compete for the best opportunities. And that's an incredibly positive impact."
Women in tech have long complained about an uneven playing field — lower pay for equal work, being passed over for promotions and a hostile "brogrammer" culture — and have waited for a catalyst to finally overhaul the status quo.
This trial — pitting a disgruntled, multimillionaire former junior partner against a powerful Menlo Park, Calif., venture capital firm — was far from the open-and-shut case that many women had hoped for.
More gender discrimination suits against big tech firms are expected to follow; some already have, including lawsuits against Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc.
Comment Not the time to quit (Score 1) 986
Quitting now just makes it easier. Clog up the cloud. Do it with purpose and deliberation. Don't quit. Never surrender.
Comment I don't get it... (Score 4, Insightful) 279
What's the problem? There is almost 40 YEARS of novels and they never seem to have any trouble.
Comment Paizo's Planet Stories (Score 1) 1244
The RPG company, Paizo, has an imprint called Planet Stories. It reprints lesser known works by the giant's of the pulp scifi and fantasy era. Leigh Brackett, Henry Kuttner, Robert Howard and (my personal favorite) Manly Wade Wellman.
http://paizo.com/planetStories
Submission + - 5th Edition of Dungeons and Dragons Announced (wizards.com)
Submission + - Google Launches Google+, The Social Network of Goo (nytimes.com) 2
Comment Re:iCloud... great but not great (Score 1) 662
That was my first thought. BUt THere was something about "Wifi" only in the presentation... well.. at least on Engadget's Liveblog.
Comment Re:Well Duh (Score 1) 2058
This was reported on our local news. I haven't read the original article, but the firefighters DID protect the neighbor's house. As you may have guessed, the neighbor had paid the fee.
Submission + - Scientific R&D At Home