Clearly not, but this is a circular argument. As companies expand in size they naturally increase both their needs and their resources. Are you arguing that using SaaS developer tools like the ones in this journal entry…
Try "Chief executives and legislators"
You're not alone with this specific gripe. Some of my colleagues include sites similar to https://nohello.net in their staff directory page.
While this may be a serious problem it doesn't actually seem relevant to this breach - if a CRA has an incident of this severity, most ID schemes are still going to end up with a pretty large leak of PII that can be…
The blog post and cloud provider's website both say the servers are bare metal.
If they were personalised it would be hard for sites like camelcamelcamel.com to exist, right? I would speculate that they don't personalise. Offering price discrimination as a service to third party sellers sounds like…
Running a few product lines at a loss is a classic way for a large company to put competitors out of business, in general terms. Once the competition is gone there maybe an opportunity for the remaining company to raise…
This is happening inside cities though. I'll take some arrogance and selfishness to reduce the incidence of dengue.
Didn't know much about this conflict, thank you for educating me. One other difference between those combatants and a theoretically nuclear armed Ukraine is that that war is more widely seem as an existential threat to…
> The conflict was low intensity warfare, which nukes are not particularly well suited for. Firstly "was" is not the right word, the war is ongoing: http://tass.com/world/965974 Secondly, imo the nature of the conflict…
One could even go as far as calling the title clickbait.
Doesn't this assume maintaining existing usage patterns? There could be enough flexibility in workloads that with an economic incentive they will be run at peak production times with only the necessities being turned on…
As Brian Krebs reported in the "dumpster fire" article the response site was setup by their PR company. Perhaps they did not want to give away ownership of part of their domain... For security reasons
Maybe. The separate domain might be explained by lack of trust in their PR company though. See Krebs' article: https://krebsonsecurity.com/2017/09/equifax-breach-response-...
about:config -> media.autoplay.enabled Some sites are buggy with this preference. Hopefully you will not lay that at Mozilla's feet.
If you release your tools under GPL it is less likely anyone will get paid to improve them. If you release under MIT, commercial users will try to upstream their changes so they can continue to benefit from trunk…
Your second paragraph makes it seem like those weren't really humans - "cleared out", really? And having been decimated by plague diseases makes shooting the survivors equivalent to crossing a border illegally so you…
Might be interesting to look at the study itself. It doesn't say if it was summer or winter when it was undertaken. I wonder if results would be much different for other non-electrified people
Depending on who you are pitching, it might turn out something like http://getcoleman.com/
I don't know if there should be more or less credit, although it sure seems like an improvement to reduce fraud and have less people up to their ears in debt. Even if the companies running the system have serious…
Could argue that industries with low startup costs are much less likely to suffer a proliferation of Apache Struts. Increased competitive pressure to improve an information product might bring the side effect of more…
And a big fuck you to everybody that has made efforts and sacrifices to improve their credit rating, they can take the same (higher) interest rate as everyone else?
> If there's a history of these execs selling similar amounts of stock in other quarters That's what 105b-1 trading plans are for. If they had used them there would be no questions to ask.
Not to mention the captive portal redirect URL
For Google to collect data on their platform customers' layer 7 traffic would be a pretty big breach of trust (i .e. hacking if they were using HTTPS) If they are just collecting TCP data and selling it to third party…
Clearly not, but this is a circular argument. As companies expand in size they naturally increase both their needs and their resources. Are you arguing that using SaaS developer tools like the ones in this journal entry…
Try "Chief executives and legislators"
You're not alone with this specific gripe. Some of my colleagues include sites similar to https://nohello.net in their staff directory page.
While this may be a serious problem it doesn't actually seem relevant to this breach - if a CRA has an incident of this severity, most ID schemes are still going to end up with a pretty large leak of PII that can be…
The blog post and cloud provider's website both say the servers are bare metal.
If they were personalised it would be hard for sites like camelcamelcamel.com to exist, right? I would speculate that they don't personalise. Offering price discrimination as a service to third party sellers sounds like…
Running a few product lines at a loss is a classic way for a large company to put competitors out of business, in general terms. Once the competition is gone there maybe an opportunity for the remaining company to raise…
This is happening inside cities though. I'll take some arrogance and selfishness to reduce the incidence of dengue.
Didn't know much about this conflict, thank you for educating me. One other difference between those combatants and a theoretically nuclear armed Ukraine is that that war is more widely seem as an existential threat to…
> The conflict was low intensity warfare, which nukes are not particularly well suited for. Firstly "was" is not the right word, the war is ongoing: http://tass.com/world/965974 Secondly, imo the nature of the conflict…
One could even go as far as calling the title clickbait.
Doesn't this assume maintaining existing usage patterns? There could be enough flexibility in workloads that with an economic incentive they will be run at peak production times with only the necessities being turned on…
As Brian Krebs reported in the "dumpster fire" article the response site was setup by their PR company. Perhaps they did not want to give away ownership of part of their domain... For security reasons
Maybe. The separate domain might be explained by lack of trust in their PR company though. See Krebs' article: https://krebsonsecurity.com/2017/09/equifax-breach-response-...
about:config -> media.autoplay.enabled Some sites are buggy with this preference. Hopefully you will not lay that at Mozilla's feet.
If you release your tools under GPL it is less likely anyone will get paid to improve them. If you release under MIT, commercial users will try to upstream their changes so they can continue to benefit from trunk…
Your second paragraph makes it seem like those weren't really humans - "cleared out", really? And having been decimated by plague diseases makes shooting the survivors equivalent to crossing a border illegally so you…
Might be interesting to look at the study itself. It doesn't say if it was summer or winter when it was undertaken. I wonder if results would be much different for other non-electrified people
Depending on who you are pitching, it might turn out something like http://getcoleman.com/
I don't know if there should be more or less credit, although it sure seems like an improvement to reduce fraud and have less people up to their ears in debt. Even if the companies running the system have serious…
Could argue that industries with low startup costs are much less likely to suffer a proliferation of Apache Struts. Increased competitive pressure to improve an information product might bring the side effect of more…
And a big fuck you to everybody that has made efforts and sacrifices to improve their credit rating, they can take the same (higher) interest rate as everyone else?
> If there's a history of these execs selling similar amounts of stock in other quarters That's what 105b-1 trading plans are for. If they had used them there would be no questions to ask.
Not to mention the captive portal redirect URL
For Google to collect data on their platform customers' layer 7 traffic would be a pretty big breach of trust (i .e. hacking if they were using HTTPS) If they are just collecting TCP data and selling it to third party…