Comment And we thought drones were a problem... (Score 4, Insightful) 98
Comment Even M$ says IE isn't a real browser (Score 1) 46
Comment There are just never enough bits in your integers (Score 2) 113
Submission + - Unpatched Linux bug may open devices to serious attacks over Wi-Fi (arstechnica.com)
At a minimum, exploits would cause an operating-system crash and could possibly allow a hacker to gain complete control of the computer. The flaw dates back to version 3.10.1 of the Linux kernel released in 2013.
Submission + - California Launches 1st Statewide Earthquake Early Warning System 1
Comment Re:I support the guy (Score 1) 237
It's a binary case with no mitigating circumstances.
Go read the goddam code. The jury is instructed to consider one fact: "Did the defendant share confidential information with a journalist?"
The jury cannot consider cause.
Well, other than the fact that SCOTUS has acknowledged that jury nullification is legal... The big issue is whether or not a jury should be apprised of this fact.
Comment Re: I support the guy (Score 1) 237
The US does not allow a public interest defense for espionage charges.
How exactly is what he did espionage? If he had attempted to covertly transmit those documents to a foreign power it would be espionage. He gave documents to the press to release to the public. While that's technically a crime because he didn't whistleblow though the proper channels, it's not espionage.
Sorry, that is incorrect. IANAL, but in describing the crime of espionage 18 U.S.C. 798(a) specifically states "Whoever knowingly and willfully communicates, furnishes, transmits, or otherwise makes available to an unauthorized person... classified information...)
You may not like it, but the definition of the crime does not require release to a foreign government.
Submission + - A tectonic plate may have peeled apart—and that could shrink the Atlantic (nationalgeographic.com)
Now, 50 years after the event, he may finally have an answer: The bottom of the tectonic plate off Portugal's coast seems to be peeling away from its top. This action may be providing the necessary spark for one plate to start grinding beneath another in what's known as a subduction zone, according to computer simulations Duarte presented in April at the European Geosciences Union meeting.
If confirmed, the new work would be the first time an oceanic plate has been caught in the act of peeling—and it may mark one of the earliest stages of the Atlantic Ocean shrinking, sending Europe inching toward Canada as predicted by some models of tectonic activity. (Find out what scientists think will happen when Earth's tectonic plates grind to a halt.)
Submission + - China's Largest Stock Photo Provider Attracts Fire Over Use of Black Hole Image (techcrunch.com)
Comment Re: It's not out yet (Score 2) 131
Windows has the clearly superior MPC-HC which is free as in freedom and free as in beer...
As long as you don't think you'll ever need support of any kind, perhaps.
Comment Abominable (Score 1) 381
Dear heavens - I may have to try Bing News again....
Comment Re:Answer (Score 1) 237
The answer is there is no way to do it. If a computer is on a network it isn't secure and it can't be isolated. A "network" is the anthesis of isolation. If you connect it to the Internet, game over man.
See the pilot episodes of Battlestar Galactica...