topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Friday November 14, 2025, 5:57 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 20 21 22 23 24 [25] 26 27 28 29 30 ... 310next
601
Living Room / Re: NCH Software - "There Be Dragons"
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 07, 2012, 12:43 PM »
Just curious has NCH been bought out by some scummy company or have they just fallen in the mire? They used to produce some good stuff.
602
Living Room / Re: Raspberry Pi being manufactured in the UK
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 07, 2012, 04:03 AM »
Hang on a mo it never was American - maybe they should flip everything for the US market!
603
Living Room / Re: Raspberry Pi being manufactured in the UK
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 06, 2012, 06:00 PM »
Yes and Yes.

But then I think UK production was always the intention.
604
The irony is that to track behaviour they are breaking the law!!!
Which law? :)

You can spy on a torrent swarm without downloading anything from it.

To be in the swarm monitoring they must be downloading illegal material too

Plus there must be some privacy issues (internationally) if they are potentially using it to personally identify people.
605
The irony is that to track behaviour they are breaking the law!!!
606
Developer's Corner / Re: Any DC members thinking of trying Kickstarter?
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 06, 2012, 09:06 AM »
And it has hit its $400,000 target!!!!  :-*
607
Developer's Corner / Re: Any DC members thinking of trying Kickstarter?
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 04, 2012, 12:37 PM »
Strange - didn't give me the option.
608
Developer's Corner / Re: Any DC members thinking of trying Kickstarter?
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 04, 2012, 09:12 AM »
Kickstarter do support projects outside the US - I have just subscribed to a project based in York in the UK.

See http://www.kickstart...ents-curse-adventure (sorry but I like the Broken Sword series of games !)

Having said that it all seems to be handled via the US and payments for that project went through Amazon US payment system.
609
Living Room / Re: Apple v Samsung Verdict is in
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 02, 2012, 06:54 AM »
You would have thought they could get government backing to finally stop the nonsense!
610
Living Room / Re: Apple v Samsung Verdict is in
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 02, 2012, 05:55 AM »
So why aren't LG having some fun in court!
611
Living Room / Re: Apple v Samsung Verdict is in
« Last post by Carol Haynes on September 01, 2012, 06:04 PM »
Am I being naive and missing the point (easily done when you are as daft as me) but that must be a joke? Did MPEG4 exist in 2001 ?
612
Living Room / Re: Apple v Samsung Verdict is in
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 31, 2012, 09:44 AM »
LOL if only it were true ;-)
613
Living Room / Re: Apple v Samsung Verdict is in
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 29, 2012, 07:11 PM »
Is it legal in the US to give an interview like that? In the UK jurors are not allowed to discuss the jury room process outside the room even after the trial is over - and I would guess especially when an appeal is pending ???

Also most of what was described seemed (to my limited knowledge) to be about Android? So why was Google not in the dock instead of Samsung?
614
General Software Discussion / Re: Fake Reviews: Amazon's Rotten Core
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 29, 2012, 11:56 AM »
Certified email already exists - I don't really understand why it can't be made mandatory.

I don't see why every stage of the journey would need to be different to now - you could leave the certificate verification to the last leg of the journey - ie. the POP or IMAP server accessed by the user - just bin anything that doesn't have a valid certificate before it gets to the end user.


I think it would remove a lot of spam - one of the main features of email systems at the moment that makes spamming so easy and lucrative is the ability to abuse servers and remain anonymous. If spammers were easily identifiable it would remove a lot of the incentive.

It would also be useful if emails could be automatically tagged with tracking info as they pass through servers.

Geo Referencing IPs is so easy these days it would be really good to see a human reable geo location list of where the email originated etc. added by every server it passed through.
615
General Software Discussion / Re: Fake Reviews: Amazon's Rotten Core
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 29, 2012, 11:18 AM »
I think the whole issue needs to be resolved at ISP level. Just like we have certificates for websites ISPs should issue certificates for users and websites and email should only allow certified users to use the service. The ISP has to know who you are and where you are to bill you so when you sign up for an account your details could be fixed by the certificate issuing authority. It would also save having to fill in name and address details all the time.

Websites could then refuse access to someone who doesn't come with a verified certificate. Could potentially reduce the amount of spam if mail servers only accepted mail from genuine certificated users.

Would also stop fake accounts because the certified user would have to be registered at an address with credit card or bank details to get the certificate.

Sounds very, very dangerous. It basically eliminates privacy entirely. Besides, it wouldn't stop spammers. e.g. http://pwnieexpress....oducts/wireless-plug



Don't really understand the last comment - if ISPs only actually accept email from certified users then spam would be seriously reduced and prosecutions more effective. If you want to use your own domain name you already have to register it and are legally required to provide accurate contact details - if certificates could be attached to your account and/or hosting server it would make it far harder for spammers to spoof your email address - and you wouldn't have to divulge any information that isn't already required.

As for privacy on the internet - in this day and age privacy is a total myth - on the internet doubly so.

I don't see why certification, per se, should impact on privacy - I am not suggesting that they should collect all user activity as part of that (beyond what they do now) and they wouldn't have to collect any more personal data - but they would be required to verify that the data provided is accurate before issuing a certificate. Given that ISPs have to know who you are, where you live, and a payment method it shouldn't take much more for them to issue a secure certificate which you can then use to verofy your genuine user status when you register at a webshop (which again needs the same information). It would also stop fraud because they shop would know your real name and address for shipping goods and so no one else could hijack the account to send stuff to alternative addresses.

The UK government are already (and repeatedly) pushing for legislation to force ISPs to log website visits, internet traffic and even email content for all users (of course if we don't want it we are all terrorists). The US already does this sort of thing as a matter of course.

Don't know about other countries but I am pretty sure the last UK Labour government made it illegal to use encrypted content email because they want to be able to read it. God knows how they plan to enforce that but then it is illegal in the UK to own software or hardware that even has the potential to commit illegal acts (and especially DVD/BD ripping) - presumably everybody with a computer is a potential prosecution target!
616
General Software Discussion / Re: Fake Reviews: Amazon's Rotten Core
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 29, 2012, 06:06 AM »
I think the whole issue needs to be resolved at ISP level. Just like we have certificates for websites ISPs should issue certificates for users and websites and email should only allow certified users to use the service. The ISP has to know who you are and where you are to bill you so when you sign up for an account your details could be fixed by the certificate issuing authority. It would also save having to fill in name and address details all the time.

Websites could then refuse access to someone who doesn't come with a verified certificate. Could potentially reduce the amount of spam if mail servers only accepted mail from genuine certificated users.

Would also stop fake accounts because the certified user would have to be registered at an address with credit card or bank details to get the certificate.
617
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: BitsduJour Malware bytes Deal
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 29, 2012, 05:04 AM »
No - but it works great alongside MSE
618
I've had this too - it is a BIOS boot priority issue - check you are set to boot from the correct drive

619
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: BitsduJour Malware bytes Deal
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 27, 2012, 04:42 PM »
I'll second that. But I never use the RTP, I leave that up to MSE.

I run both - they don't conflict
620
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: BitsduJour Malware bytes Deal
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 27, 2012, 01:40 PM »
+1 for Malwarebytes. Already use it on all my computers and recommend it to customers. Bought more licenses to support them.

Excellent product and the RTP is not obtrusive or CPU intensive.

Best cleaning tool I have found by far.
621
Living Room / Re: Wikileaks - Julian Assange Granted Asylum by Ecuador
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 26, 2012, 08:56 AM »
I just hope Ecuador have large, bullet-proof diplomatic bags ...

Seriously though storming an Embassy is de facto  a declaration of war - are we (the UK) really happy with the idea that we unilaterally declare war on another state so that the US can extradite someone out of spite? I have heard of the special relationship but that if fucking stupid - but then our Tories are nearly as rabid as the republican guard in the US who won't be happy until they get a total republican military dictatorship with a cabinet drawn from Westboro Baptist church!
622
Living Room / Re: Neil Armstrong, first man on the moon, dies
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 25, 2012, 07:39 PM »
A genuine hero - he'll be missed but not forgotten.
623
Living Room / Re: Apple v Samsung Verdict is in
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 25, 2012, 06:51 AM »
40Hz - that was precisely my reaction too. It was never going to be any different.

It will be interesting to see what happens in the European and Australian courts LOL
624
DC Gamer Club / Re: Humble Bundle 3 for Android Live
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 22, 2012, 02:07 PM »
We’ve just added four awesome games for your mobile and desktop entertainment: Anomaly: Warzone Earth, EDGE, Osmos, and World of Goo! These games were first seen in the original Humble Bundle for Android, and we’re happy to bring them back for more gamers to enjoy!

Enjoy
625
Living Room / Re: The Final Nail in the Coffin for Privacy?
« Last post by Carol Haynes on August 22, 2012, 12:11 PM »
I thought quantum cryptography was supposed to be the ultimate in security?

http://www.csa.com/d...s/crypt/overview.php

Of course we all need fibre optics but that is coming!
Pages: prev1 ... 20 21 22 23 24 [25] 26 27 28 29 30 ... 310next