[–] guptaneil 13y ago ↗ It's possible to fool GitHub by changing your system clock before committing. You can make commits appear from the future too. See http://blog.metamorphium.com/2012/12/02/just-for-fun-code-fr... [–] ajross 13y ago ↗ Surely you don't have to touch the hardware. Just hand-editing a patch file before applying with git am is enough.
[–] ajross 13y ago ↗ Surely you don't have to touch the hardware. Just hand-editing a patch file before applying with git am is enough.
[–] michaelmior 13y ago ↗ Interesting that the actual date of the commit is December 31, 1969. [–] dereferenced 13y ago ↗ Wow, almost like it's the EPOCH and there was a bug that set unixtime to 0. [–] bjustin 13y ago ↗ Sounds like the UNIX time epoch but in a timezone in America, e.g. EST (UTC-5), making it the day before. [–] daragh 13y ago ↗ Ah yes, the day we sold our bus.
[–] dereferenced 13y ago ↗ Wow, almost like it's the EPOCH and there was a bug that set unixtime to 0.
[–] bjustin 13y ago ↗ Sounds like the UNIX time epoch but in a timezone in America, e.g. EST (UTC-5), making it the day before.
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