Free: https://archive.is/hfbkz I tried to catch an Uber ride from Heathrow before, and it was a total nightmare in terms of not knowing where to go, having come out of the wrong exit, and the driver ending up in a car…
I remember when thinkgeek had a wide variety of genuinely interesting stuff and not just the latest pop culture 'geek' merchandise (sure, they've always had some of that, but years back it wasn't the overriding theme…
Sometimes people don't comment because they don't have anything interesting/useful to add, but still found the article interesting and want it to be more visible, so they upvote it and move on.
Price, mostly. It's good, but there are alternatives that aren't as ridiculously expensive.
>'Cyber' Literally laughed out loud. It's just become too much of a joke now.
People don't want it because it's binary, not because you can't grep it. * you need to use a new proprietary tool to interact with them * all scripts relating to logs are now broken * binary logs are easy to corrupt,…
I had the same feeling - plus the broadband there was terrible. I would never live in a suburb even if I was paid to. The middle of nowhere though, would be even worse than a suburb as it's the same problems but more so…
Not the first time it's been done. Of course, it's only worked some of the time it's been done, I guess.
Mildly misleading title there; the dishes are all in the southern hemisphere IIRC. That said, Jodrell Bank is a very interesting place. Good article: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/03/25/geeks_guide_jodrell_...
Hasn't the US done this too, even if not recently then at least historically? The Royal Navy still does this today though.
Are people only just realising this? I would only ever use agent forwarding to a trusted host exactly because of what it does - put a socket on that host that responds with your SSH key... Anyone on that host with root…
The article says it uses a second vuln that forces the device to connect to a specific network.
I would love this... if it wasn't by google. I'd rather not have them digging through yet more personal data :(
>I hope to god those contactless credit cards can't be just cloned with a long range rfid reader or else this is gonna be a very funny few years They can. That's why they require your PIN every N tries (N is…
Same as the "internet of things" - they are with security where Microsoft was in the 1990s. Security by obscurity is their watchword. Always remember: "Internet Of Things is also called IOT, because you'd have to be an…
It's been happening since the 70s with cruise missiles, which are a basic drone that just flies into a target and explodes.
You could get an RFID-blocking wallet (should anyway, really) and put the key in that. I have one from http://difrwear.com/; I've tested it and it's never leaked any signal from cards inside; should work fine with keys…
Free version: https://archive.today/WyCdu This is why I despair at all these new keyless cars. I would pay money to have a normal key over one of those, because it's more secure. Also, one huge reason I would never want…
Good for them. About time someone stood up to surveillance in a meaningful way - hit the government where it hurts (in the wallet) is a tactic that should be used more.
Use it. 7.1a has been shown safe. Watch https://truecrypt.ch/ for news about any developments (CipherShed and/or VeraCrypt) as well as being a trusted source for 7.1a.
Sadly, there are still plenty of real servers that badly secured.
He wanted to make sure it was really chmoded.
On their public site? It's also written in such an amateurish style anyway...
https://archive.today/P6BhP
Australia seems to be leading the world in oppression in a way even the US has yet to manage.
Free: https://archive.is/hfbkz I tried to catch an Uber ride from Heathrow before, and it was a total nightmare in terms of not knowing where to go, having come out of the wrong exit, and the driver ending up in a car…
I remember when thinkgeek had a wide variety of genuinely interesting stuff and not just the latest pop culture 'geek' merchandise (sure, they've always had some of that, but years back it wasn't the overriding theme…
Sometimes people don't comment because they don't have anything interesting/useful to add, but still found the article interesting and want it to be more visible, so they upvote it and move on.
Price, mostly. It's good, but there are alternatives that aren't as ridiculously expensive.
>'Cyber' Literally laughed out loud. It's just become too much of a joke now.
People don't want it because it's binary, not because you can't grep it. * you need to use a new proprietary tool to interact with them * all scripts relating to logs are now broken * binary logs are easy to corrupt,…
I had the same feeling - plus the broadband there was terrible. I would never live in a suburb even if I was paid to. The middle of nowhere though, would be even worse than a suburb as it's the same problems but more so…
Not the first time it's been done. Of course, it's only worked some of the time it's been done, I guess.
Mildly misleading title there; the dishes are all in the southern hemisphere IIRC. That said, Jodrell Bank is a very interesting place. Good article: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/03/25/geeks_guide_jodrell_...
Hasn't the US done this too, even if not recently then at least historically? The Royal Navy still does this today though.
Are people only just realising this? I would only ever use agent forwarding to a trusted host exactly because of what it does - put a socket on that host that responds with your SSH key... Anyone on that host with root…
The article says it uses a second vuln that forces the device to connect to a specific network.
I would love this... if it wasn't by google. I'd rather not have them digging through yet more personal data :(
>I hope to god those contactless credit cards can't be just cloned with a long range rfid reader or else this is gonna be a very funny few years They can. That's why they require your PIN every N tries (N is…
Same as the "internet of things" - they are with security where Microsoft was in the 1990s. Security by obscurity is their watchword. Always remember: "Internet Of Things is also called IOT, because you'd have to be an…
It's been happening since the 70s with cruise missiles, which are a basic drone that just flies into a target and explodes.
You could get an RFID-blocking wallet (should anyway, really) and put the key in that. I have one from http://difrwear.com/; I've tested it and it's never leaked any signal from cards inside; should work fine with keys…
Free version: https://archive.today/WyCdu This is why I despair at all these new keyless cars. I would pay money to have a normal key over one of those, because it's more secure. Also, one huge reason I would never want…
Good for them. About time someone stood up to surveillance in a meaningful way - hit the government where it hurts (in the wallet) is a tactic that should be used more.
Use it. 7.1a has been shown safe. Watch https://truecrypt.ch/ for news about any developments (CipherShed and/or VeraCrypt) as well as being a trusted source for 7.1a.
Sadly, there are still plenty of real servers that badly secured.
He wanted to make sure it was really chmoded.
On their public site? It's also written in such an amateurish style anyway...
https://archive.today/P6BhP
Australia seems to be leading the world in oppression in a way even the US has yet to manage.