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Submission + - Supreme Court to hear First Sale Doctrine case (cnn.com)

Registered Coward v2 writes: SCOTUS is set to hear a case to determine how copyright law and the doctrine of first sale applies to copyrighted works bought overseas, imported to the US and then sold. The case involves a foreign student who imported textbooks from Asia and the resold them in the US to help fund his education. He was sued by the publisher, lost and was ordered to pay $600k in damages. Now SCOTUS gets to weigh in on the issue.

Submission + - Protecting against smash and grab?

rstory writes: I seem to be hearing about more smash and grab thefts lately, from low-tech purse snatching to thieves after laptops and cameras. Bold thieves are even snatching stuff in church/day-care parking lots in the 5 minute window while a parent goes in to pick up their child. I often drive around with my laptop, and want to find the best way to protect against theft. Besides the obvious "don't leave equipment in the car" solution, what else are people doing? Right now I just use a regular backpack instead of a fancy laptop case. I don't have a trunk, so when I leave the car I put the backpack on the floor of the back seat, sometimes throwing other junk on top. The only interesting thing I've found while googling is a couple of 'anti-theft' backpacks which have wire mesh to prevent cutting them open and a (thin looking) cable for securing to a stationary object. What do you do to protect your gear?

Comment Re:You're Wrong (Score 1) 13

In answer to your question, no, it is not normal hosting policy.

I think it is common for the places that advertise very high storage limits... Dreamhost does the same thing.. though I had to get up to tens of gigabytes, not just 1, before I got smacked down by them..

Comment Re:Spoofing has not been a problem for years (Score 1) 211

Sigh. There's never a mod point around when you need it.

every self-respecting network operator has RPF ... enabled at the edge

No, they don't. Not even close.

Gone are the days of spoofing

You haven't been paying attention, have you? The recent DNS DDOS attacks used spoofing to help generate the DOS attacks that hit rates of Gb/s.

Spoofing is still a concern, and every self-respecting network operator should have anti-spoofing filters, but they don't.

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