Plus the main point of this code is to have people look at it, the function is secondary to being an easter egg.
Cynically, to make a documentary and get articles written. None of the rules they mention seem that extreme, they're just wording it in an unusual way.
Aren't shoe companies notoriously scummy in regards to human rights? Nike has quite a lengthy controversies section on Wikipedia, and they're where a lot of his money came from.
>We can't really export anything to those "rogue states" anyway Sure, but there are additional laws regarding cryptography, even in publicly available software. "Rogue states" is a legal designation, we can both dislike…
If I remember, it's still illegal to export to "rogue states," Iran and North Korea being the major two, and terrorist organizations. But I don't think anybody has been charged for it and there's reason to suspect it…
That was not clear to me. Dunno why people are making such a big deal out of "if you want more info, go here."
There's a picture of a box with a bunch of playing cards on top of it, then a picture of a building that has one. I found it insufficient and thought others might too.
As I found the article did a poor job of demonstrating what a swift brick is, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swift_brick
Huh? IA not doing what they claim seems fairly important to their point.
HN search is fantastic, it doesn't look like it. https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...
It also makes them appear larger, there's so much in there the bun can't contain it all.
The router ban affects routers made in foreign countries, Netgear's headquarters should be irrelevant. The author's previous article spells this out better https://www.theverge.com/tech/899906/fcc-router-ban-march-20...
IA makes torrents for basically everything on it's site.
Does "report not spam" do anything? A local business will send me a receipt from a gmail address, and every time it's marked as spam despite it telling me future mail from this address will not be tagged as spam.
If you found a dog on the street then you probably don't have any actual dog food. A hot dog seems like one of the best options in an average fridge.
So something like getting Phil Spector to produce their record?
>What am I supposed to do? Spend a few hours to try each one and find the best for my 13 years old i5 with a Nvidia gt440 that's used 3 hours per month? The performance difference will be minimal. It's an aesthetic…
Minnesota did have home ice cream and other frozen food delivery until Schwan's finally shut down a few years ago. Usually men, but they did tend to be chatty from my experience. So there is a US equivalent, but it…
We're these only used in Sweden? I know I've seen some of them before, but I'm not sure if it's from decades on the internet or my school having a specific thirty year old edition of The Hobbit. I seem to recall…
Most racers didn't finish, so the water idea was just dumb. I'm not sure how serious anyone that actually trained ever took it. The strychnine taker did feel like crap. From…
>It's been a very long time since I moved to Arch, but I swear that something like 12 years ago it did have some form of menu-driven installer. Yep, removed in 2012 as the last maintainer quit. Maintaining an installer…
Yes, but largely by a Japanese team moved over out of hopes they could train the Americans and corporate politics.
It had been a while since I read the DMCA, and I was mistaken. It says "No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under (copyright)" so it doesn't need an…
>What about the anti-piracy measures on the Blu Ray? In the US, bypassing DRM is a crime even if the intended use is legal. There are exceptions for things like criticism and accessibility, but I don't believe they'd be…
It's not hard to imagine the last default search contract negotiation had Google go "we'll give you $x if you kill manifest v2, $x-$150 million if you don't." edited to correct my misunderstanding.
Plus the main point of this code is to have people look at it, the function is secondary to being an easter egg.
Cynically, to make a documentary and get articles written. None of the rules they mention seem that extreme, they're just wording it in an unusual way.
Aren't shoe companies notoriously scummy in regards to human rights? Nike has quite a lengthy controversies section on Wikipedia, and they're where a lot of his money came from.
>We can't really export anything to those "rogue states" anyway Sure, but there are additional laws regarding cryptography, even in publicly available software. "Rogue states" is a legal designation, we can both dislike…
If I remember, it's still illegal to export to "rogue states," Iran and North Korea being the major two, and terrorist organizations. But I don't think anybody has been charged for it and there's reason to suspect it…
That was not clear to me. Dunno why people are making such a big deal out of "if you want more info, go here."
There's a picture of a box with a bunch of playing cards on top of it, then a picture of a building that has one. I found it insufficient and thought others might too.
As I found the article did a poor job of demonstrating what a swift brick is, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swift_brick
Huh? IA not doing what they claim seems fairly important to their point.
HN search is fantastic, it doesn't look like it. https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...
It also makes them appear larger, there's so much in there the bun can't contain it all.
The router ban affects routers made in foreign countries, Netgear's headquarters should be irrelevant. The author's previous article spells this out better https://www.theverge.com/tech/899906/fcc-router-ban-march-20...
IA makes torrents for basically everything on it's site.
Does "report not spam" do anything? A local business will send me a receipt from a gmail address, and every time it's marked as spam despite it telling me future mail from this address will not be tagged as spam.
If you found a dog on the street then you probably don't have any actual dog food. A hot dog seems like one of the best options in an average fridge.
So something like getting Phil Spector to produce their record?
>What am I supposed to do? Spend a few hours to try each one and find the best for my 13 years old i5 with a Nvidia gt440 that's used 3 hours per month? The performance difference will be minimal. It's an aesthetic…
Minnesota did have home ice cream and other frozen food delivery until Schwan's finally shut down a few years ago. Usually men, but they did tend to be chatty from my experience. So there is a US equivalent, but it…
We're these only used in Sweden? I know I've seen some of them before, but I'm not sure if it's from decades on the internet or my school having a specific thirty year old edition of The Hobbit. I seem to recall…
Most racers didn't finish, so the water idea was just dumb. I'm not sure how serious anyone that actually trained ever took it. The strychnine taker did feel like crap. From…
>It's been a very long time since I moved to Arch, but I swear that something like 12 years ago it did have some form of menu-driven installer. Yep, removed in 2012 as the last maintainer quit. Maintaining an installer…
Yes, but largely by a Japanese team moved over out of hopes they could train the Americans and corporate politics.
It had been a while since I read the DMCA, and I was mistaken. It says "No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under (copyright)" so it doesn't need an…
>What about the anti-piracy measures on the Blu Ray? In the US, bypassing DRM is a crime even if the intended use is legal. There are exceptions for things like criticism and accessibility, but I don't believe they'd be…
It's not hard to imagine the last default search contract negotiation had Google go "we'll give you $x if you kill manifest v2, $x-$150 million if you don't." edited to correct my misunderstanding.