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Comment Re:Something I've considered... (Score 1) 505

And then security only works if it's strictly enforced... the moment I read your message I had to think of Security Now's Horrifying PayPal Revelation of the Week. Check out Security Now Episode 188, and look for "Horrifying PayPal Revelation of the Week"....

I'm going to kill the suspense: the security question was the last 4 digits of the bank account linked to the account, and the person who forgot his password was able to guess these numbers, with a little help from Paypal's customer service rep....

Comment Re:Something I've considered... (Score 2, Insightful) 505

The main problem I think is that a lot of businesses use it as if it were a secret. If that mindset would change, the problem would go away.

"So you say you're Mike Jones. We need to verify that. What are the last 4 digits of your SSN?"
- "Hold on, let me get your last bill, where it's printed on the top of every page."

How can that be used as a security measure? Using an identifier as an authentication method is simply a BAD IDEA.

Security

Reporters Find US Gov't Data In Ghana Market 154

narramissic writes "'Hundreds and hundreds of documents about government contracts,' were found on a hard drive purchased at a market in Ghana for the bargain basement price of $40, said Peter Klein, an associate professor with the University of British Columbia, who led an investigation into the global electronic waste business for the PBS show Frontline. The hard drive had belonged to US government contractor Northrop Grumman and in a made-for-TV ironic twist, 'some of the documents talked about how to recruit airport screeners and several of them even covered data security practices,' Klein said. 'Here were these contracts being awarded based on their ability to keep the data safe.'"

Comment Re:No cnt++ (Score 1) 321

Right, right. Because IT people are going to be more knowledgeable than SALES people who make their LIVING persuading people.

The idea is that you give arguments why it is a bad idea, and convey them in layman terms. If Einstein was able to explain the Special Relativity Theory by talking about a person on a train with a flash light, we in IT should be able to do something like that too!

The Courts

Russia Launches Anti-trust Probe of Microsoft 221

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Russia's state anti-monopoly service said on Thursday it had launched a probe of Microsoft over cutbacks in supplies of its Windows XP operating system in Russia. The agency said it thought Microsoft had violated antimonopoly legislation by cutting delivery of Windows XP operating system to Russia both separately and pre-installed on personal computers, as well as in its pricing policy on the product. It said it would consider the case on July 24, 2009."

Comment Re:NASA problem (Score 5, Insightful) 500

Oh, that's only a factor of.... err.. 500? Oops.

Reminds me of a high school chemistry teacher showing us the difference between Na and K. His words:

"Na is very reactive, so we drop only a small amount in water to show the reaction." - poof

"K is a little less reactive, so we can drop a larger amount in water." - BAMMM! (and one erlenmeyer explodes in front of 35 students)

Of course, today that would mean the teacher would be sued by the parents for endangering the lives of all those students. But in my day, this means that 30 years later I remember that K is less reactive than Na, but not by very much.

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