> What is their opinion about being unable to go supersonic for more than short bursts currently classified as "will not fix" Those two countries do not do carrier ops, why would they care about this at all?
MANPADs have intercepted a few missiles, but are not a tool for intercepting missiles. > Yet it would have been a PR disaster if NATO admitted to supplying weapons to Ukraine before the invasion started. So MANPADs are…
> Denmark joined because the US invoked Article 5 after 9/11 Article 5 has only been invoked once, and did not involve any actual conflict.
Have any of the competitors been proven in combat anywhere?
You’re just lucky, plenty of spam calls in the EU.
Of course they can.
European authorities are still able to enforce fines against him unless he’s exceedingly careful, even if he doesn’t have direct presence in the EU. This is why many websites just block European IP addresses entirely.…
> skate 5km every other day to get water Is it so shallow you can’t just make a hole in the ice?
They don’t hide it better, there’s just much less of it.
What is that meant to disprove?
This is just lazy populist nonsense, why give it any airtime on HN? His argument essentially boils down to that some corruption exists in Northern Europe, therefore Southern Europe can’t be more corrupt.
Yes, AppArmor and snap try to. Still worlds away from what Windows and OS X are doing, not to even mention mobile platforms.
Desktop linux still exists in a single user world today, excluding some exotic and super fragile setups you might see in .edu networks.
It’s worth noting that desktop Linux has mostly missed this development
Outdated and unpatched does not mean easy RCEs. Let’s imagine you compromise a telco and get past the hurdle of these tractors not having public IPs, they probably still won’t have any services listening on the network.…
Vehicle registration has nothing to do with ownership, you don’t have to own a car to register it. In Europe we don’t have titles for cars like in the US. You don’t have to perform a weird ritual of signing over the…
From an European perspective the idea of a government registry tracking vehicle ownership seems downright bizarre. Our DMVs generally just track keepers and not owners. For land it makes sense, but cars? why?
Sure, but you get to push your encoder settings far less than you otherwise could. You always end up with either significantly bigger files or significantly lower quality.
Swartz was going to get a custodial sentence of less than 6 months, quite likely just probation. A slap on the wrist. What exactly did you expect the punishments to be like? A fine?
The result after recompression is far from impeccable.
> That's just because setting up cameras on public roads isn't allowed as you can capture people as well. Writing down license plates would be fine. Nonsense. https://www.enforcementtracker.com/ETid-851…
Yes, indeed. Pixel perfect rips of already compressed streams, immensely blowing up the size and requiring another round of lossy compression to actually be useful.
You can’t produce good quality rips like this, if that was the best solution the DRM people would have won.
Airbnb does this because fraudsters use it to cash out large amounts of money from stolen credit cards, they’re a lucrative target.
It really appears that this CVE was issued based on that super vague twitter thread.
> What is their opinion about being unable to go supersonic for more than short bursts currently classified as "will not fix" Those two countries do not do carrier ops, why would they care about this at all?
MANPADs have intercepted a few missiles, but are not a tool for intercepting missiles. > Yet it would have been a PR disaster if NATO admitted to supplying weapons to Ukraine before the invasion started. So MANPADs are…
> Denmark joined because the US invoked Article 5 after 9/11 Article 5 has only been invoked once, and did not involve any actual conflict.
Have any of the competitors been proven in combat anywhere?
You’re just lucky, plenty of spam calls in the EU.
Of course they can.
European authorities are still able to enforce fines against him unless he’s exceedingly careful, even if he doesn’t have direct presence in the EU. This is why many websites just block European IP addresses entirely.…
> skate 5km every other day to get water Is it so shallow you can’t just make a hole in the ice?
They don’t hide it better, there’s just much less of it.
What is that meant to disprove?
This is just lazy populist nonsense, why give it any airtime on HN? His argument essentially boils down to that some corruption exists in Northern Europe, therefore Southern Europe can’t be more corrupt.
Yes, AppArmor and snap try to. Still worlds away from what Windows and OS X are doing, not to even mention mobile platforms.
Desktop linux still exists in a single user world today, excluding some exotic and super fragile setups you might see in .edu networks.
It’s worth noting that desktop Linux has mostly missed this development
Outdated and unpatched does not mean easy RCEs. Let’s imagine you compromise a telco and get past the hurdle of these tractors not having public IPs, they probably still won’t have any services listening on the network.…
Vehicle registration has nothing to do with ownership, you don’t have to own a car to register it. In Europe we don’t have titles for cars like in the US. You don’t have to perform a weird ritual of signing over the…
From an European perspective the idea of a government registry tracking vehicle ownership seems downright bizarre. Our DMVs generally just track keepers and not owners. For land it makes sense, but cars? why?
Sure, but you get to push your encoder settings far less than you otherwise could. You always end up with either significantly bigger files or significantly lower quality.
Swartz was going to get a custodial sentence of less than 6 months, quite likely just probation. A slap on the wrist. What exactly did you expect the punishments to be like? A fine?
The result after recompression is far from impeccable.
> That's just because setting up cameras on public roads isn't allowed as you can capture people as well. Writing down license plates would be fine. Nonsense. https://www.enforcementtracker.com/ETid-851…
Yes, indeed. Pixel perfect rips of already compressed streams, immensely blowing up the size and requiring another round of lossy compression to actually be useful.
You can’t produce good quality rips like this, if that was the best solution the DRM people would have won.
Airbnb does this because fraudsters use it to cash out large amounts of money from stolen credit cards, they’re a lucrative target.
It really appears that this CVE was issued based on that super vague twitter thread.