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9026
Living Room / Re: DDOS Ethics
« Last post by Renegade on December 10, 2010, 06:35 PM »
Even Poetin starts saying that democracy in the United States is rapidly becoming a thing of the past...and he knows

Sigh... And that is the sad thing...

The US was supposed to be a departure from the old world, and a bastion of freedom. Seeing it undermined is deeply saddening. :(

BTW - I like the picketing example. Considering the actual effects of the attacks, it's quite accurate.
9027
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on December 10, 2010, 11:15 AM »
Actually, a friend of mine did recommend that (just not here). But like you mention, it is a big step. So, I'm taking it slow. I'll phase things over to Google (I think) slowly. First I just needed things working, and as I'm out of the country right now, I just couldn't manage to take the plunge all at once.

But thanks for mentioning it! And the link too! :)
9028
Living Room / Re: DDOS Ethics
« Last post by Renegade on December 10, 2010, 11:12 AM »
The fact that millions of dollars in revenue were lost because some of our most important commercial institutions were crippled by terrorists

WHOA~! Hold on... That's way too far.

A DDoS attack does not make you a "terrorist". That word is spread around far far far too liberally.

Some guy robbing a store is not a terrorist. A gang shooting up a rival drug house is not a bunch of terrorists. A man beating his wife is not a terrorist. Looters are not terrorists. When the Chinese military participates in hacking US government servers, they are not terrorists. Lawyers and politicians... errr... well... Let's not go there. :P :D

Terrorists get shipped off to off-shore black prisons where they are afforded no rights other than to not be tortured... If their captors feel like it that is...

The scale of the DDoS attacks was small and relatively unorganized. It relied on basic network load testing tools with a few sympathetic bot-net controllers throwing in some extra oomph.

Labeling people that participated in the attacks as "criminals" might be ok, but certainly not "terrorists".

9029
Developer's Corner / Re: Strangest language feature
« Last post by Renegade on December 10, 2010, 06:11 AM »
I liked this (Algol):

Code: C [Select]
  1. int a[3] = { 1, 2, 3 };
  2. int i = 1;
  3.  
  4. void f(int j)
  5. {
  6.     int k;
  7.     k = j;  // k = 2
  8.     i = 0;
  9.     k = j;  // k = 1 (!?!)    
  10. }
  11.  
  12. int main()
  13. {
  14.     f(a[i]);
  15. }

At first glance, it looks hosed, but reading through starting at main() it makes perfect sense. My question then is... Sanity? Are you there? :P :D

Thanks for that link! Some very cool stuff in there.
9030
Living Room / Re: DDOS Ethics
« Last post by Renegade on December 10, 2010, 02:38 AM »
I'm seriously hating the slanted, biased, crappy journalism covering this.

http://www.telegraph...ttack-explained.html

It is mind-boggling. Why would anyone allow an unknown party access to his/her machine to commit such a crime? The advice to all is that no matter what your views are, do not allow your computer to be used in a cyber war you will have no control over.


Ummm... Because... Meh... I can't be bothered. Anyone stupid enough not to understand the motivation and to report news in such a horridly slanted fashion is simply not capable of understanding why.

In case anyone wants to check out the IRC chat, look here: https://03.chat.mibb...m%2FOperationPayback

LOIC is on github. HOIC is here: http://hoic.99k.org/

Not too sure about HOIC. It includes source though.

More info here: http://boards.808chan.org/tpb/

Op_Payback Twitter channel: https://twitter.com/#!/Op_Payback -- Looks like it's TPB inspired.

Anonymous Wikipedia entry: https://secure.wikim...iki/Anonymous_(group)

Anyways, that's enough info for people to get started and find out what's actually happening.


@F0dder -- yes -- they are somewhat immature and it is abrasive... That approach seems much better. The key to this all is to flood information out there for people to quickly digest. Make the information accessible. That really is the best way to get the message through. I hope it works.
9031
Living Room / Re: DDOS Ethics
« Last post by Renegade on December 10, 2010, 02:07 AM »
An interesting development here:

http://www.boingboin...mous-stops-drop.html



9032
Living Room / Re: DDOS Ethics
« Last post by Renegade on December 10, 2010, 02:03 AM »
+1 for Stoic Joker. Nicely put. I like the Boston Tea Party allusion.

9033
To help put wikileaks in historical perspective i suggest everyone watch:

The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers
http://movies.netfli...123269?trkid=2361637

The cases definitely are not identical, but it opened my eyes to read from just this week, Ellsberg is quoted as saying "EVERY attack now made on WikiLeaks and Julian Assange was made against me and the release of the Pentagon Papers at the time."

Thanks for pointing that out. I will have to see if I can get my hands on a copy.

9034
I really have to strongly disagree with some people here.

I see what Justin Assange is doing as an act of heroism.

And, I hope it spreads. Far and wide.

Here's why I think so in a nutshell...


While some Americans may be incensed and upset, Justin has broken no laws. Anywhere.

The key is the "sovereign state". The good old US of A may think that it rules sovereign over the entire planet, solar system, galaxy, universe, and multi-verse, but I'm willing to bet that there are a few non-Americans that disagree and don't really want US laws/policy/mood rammed down their throat (the way Vietnam and Iraq did).

But what I would really like to see is the same thing happen with people in other countries inspired to do the same thing. I'd love to see documents leaked from China.

With enough "tattling" or "ratting out" or leaking or whatever you want to call it, countries and companies would be forced to behave more ethically.

Documents from Wikileaks show how Shell (the oil company) has placed people in the Nigerian government and sheds light on how they suck money out of the country while its people live in abject poverty.

This is a good thing.

I admit that I am a bit radical, but I don't see anything else being done.

I hope that liberty and freedom win here. Punishing Wikileaks and/or Justin Assange amounts to clubbing freedom of speech to death.

Heck, a US congressman wants Wikileaks to be branded as a "Foreign Terrorist Organization". Huh? WTF? If we don't like what you have to say, then you're a terrorist? It's patently clear that if the US doesn't like you, you're a terrorist. F**k reality. You're a terrorist. F**k you. F**k your family. See you in Guantanamo, punk.

Really. WTF is that? Once you are branded a "terrorist", you are no longer protected by basic human rights in the US. You're treated by an entirely different set of "rules".


I don't really see any "interesting questions" in that article, and I'm not sure on what basis one can yet decide what Mr. Assange "deserves". I do not suppose his motives are entirely virtuous, nor that Wikileaks may be a totally public-interest group. But neither have I seen much evidence to suggest otherwise, except broad and serious accusations with 0 details, much less proof, from someone who *founded and runs a competing site*. Let's not forget that anyone willing to do what these people are doing has to be, yes, dedicated, yes perhaps a bit fearless, but also quite often *a bit nuts*. The Cryptome guy certainly sounds so.

Assange deserves his day in court, and to be considered innocent until proven guilty (and let's remember the charges are not related whatsoever to the validity of the Wikileaks venture).

Wikileaks deserves to continue publishing information of significant interest to the public until and unless the good done by that starts to be outweighed by any negatives caused. So far there are little or no truly negative consequences that I'm aware of. None of the scare mongering predictions of governments worldwide have come to pass yet, that agents will be exposed and killed, that the leaks are "putting peoples lives at risk".

Wikileaks is showing that the people and organizations we have entrusted with maintaining the structure of our society and the sanctity of our lives and rights have abused that trust, time and again. *Those* people, those who have already demonstrated repeated, flagrant, and egregious abuse of trust must re-earn that trust. Their immediate protests fall on deaf ears for me, and until Wikileaks shows a similar disregard for the trust of the public and the power they hold in their hands, I'll continue to appreciate what they do.

- Oshyan

+1!

Assange deserves his day in court, and to be considered innocent until proven guilty (and let's remember the charges are not related whatsoever to the validity of the Wikileaks venture).


I think that anyone that believes he will get a fair hearing is naive. He's been branded, and the only thing left is his sentencing.

Fact is, he hasn't broken any laws. If I can quote myself:

The key is the "sovereign state". The good old US of A may think that it rules sovereign over the entire planet, solar system, galaxy, universe, and multi-verse, but I'm willing to bet that there are a few non-Americans that disagree and don't really want US laws/policy/mood rammed down their throat (the way Vietnam and Iraq did).
...
It's patently clear that if the US doesn't like you, you're a terrorist.

Any trial the poor guy gets will be a show trial at best.



Wikileaks is showing that the people and organizations we have entrusted with maintaining the structure of our society and the sanctity of our lives and rights have abused that trust, time and again. *Those* people, those who have already demonstrated repeated, flagrant, and egregious abuse of trust must re-earn that trust. Their immediate protests fall on deaf ears for me, and until Wikileaks shows a similar disregard for the trust of the public and the power they hold in their hands, I'll continue to appreciate what they do.

That was very well put.

()
||


That was very bad ASCII art of me clapping my hands.

I do hope that this is the start of holding our governments responsible and accountable. They've seem to have forgotten who they are supposed to serve.
9035
ALShow was recently renamed to ALPlayer and it's finally out in version 2 now.
9036
Regarding:
Why is it so hard to create a video cd/dvd on a windows machine?

I sympathize 100%.

I've used Vegas, and it's great. Easy to get things done. But that was a very long time ago.

I've also used a truckload of other programs, and had nothing but pain.

In fact, I am so entirely sick of it all that when I got Photoshop CS5 I just got the entire Master Suite so that I'd have Premiere. Premiere is fantastic.


The problem, to me, seems to be that there are a lot of difficult, terse, and crappy tools out there for Windows, and the only ones that are worth using aren't free.

I tried the free Pinnacle stuff and just about died at how useless it was. Windows Movie Maker is better. (Incidentally, Windows Movie Maker is really good for extremely simple stuff. I was impressed with it as I was expecting total crap. It's vastly improved now (Vista & Windows 7 versions).)
9037
Living Room / Re: DDOS Ethics
« Last post by Renegade on December 09, 2010, 05:59 AM »
That was super lazy of me. I was posting from my phone, and I hate typing without a real keyboard.

I meant agreeing with DDOSing those that try to censor Wikileaks.

It's funny that you mention the KKK. Apparently they accept donations and their payment processor is happy to oblige.

I'm with you about the KKK there though. While they're abhorrent, I'm certainly glad that they're free to spout their venom.

However, I believe that these DDOS attacks are not helping the cause. They're just going to cause governments to seize more control of the internet to "protect" us from "cyber terror" attacks.

Yes and no. The attacks apparently weren't serious attacks and didn't actually do any real damage like some of the ones we saw around 10 years ago. They basically just popped the sites briefly and that was that. They did little more than attract some media attention.

On the yes side, I think you're right about those kinds of things being twisted to seize more control.

On the ironic side, I doubt that the DDOS attacks on the Wikileaks site would prompt any kind of reaction...

As far as it goes, I think I'm siding with the hacktivists. A low level, brief DDOS is roughly the same as egging some corporate headquarters. While civil disobedience and non-violent protest are always preferable, I don't think that non-violence is always the answer. (I take it that digital attacks are still a form of violence.)

As far as Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal... WOW! What a bunch of pussies! It's just stunning that they'd chicken out like that. The guy hasn't been charged with anything and what was that old adage... Ummm... Innocent until proven guilty? Ahem...

Since when is digital publishing illegal?

I think this is really an acid test for freedom of speech. For the DDOS attacks, I'm not 100% sure that they're fully justified, though I certainly sympathize. Twitter doesn't sympathize though...

Hold up!

Sorry, the profile you are trying to view has been suspended.

There's overwhelming pressure to censor Wikileaks and throw Justin in jail, so I don't see how I can condemn any attempt to try to raise the profile of their plight, especially when their source of income is attacked by the same people that want to censor them. It's the equivalent of muzzling someone, then suffocating them. It just seems like a form of resistance that is justified.

Anyways, I'm rooting for Justin, Wikileaks, and freedom of speech.

9038
Living Room / DDOS Ethics
« Last post by Renegade on December 09, 2010, 03:55 AM »
9039
Living Room / Re: Fast Food: Ads vs. Reality
« Last post by Renegade on December 08, 2010, 07:36 AM »
That was very cool! A very interesting project indeed.

But unfortunately, it's nothing surprising. Advertising is almost equivalent to dishonesty. It's rather depressing...

I've noticed in Australia that consumer protection against dishonest advertising is even worse than in Canada and the US (and Korea and Malaysia for that matter). From what I've seen anyways, the level of honesty is much lower there.

But, I'm quite sure that there are enough smart-mouthed lawyers out there that can justify it...  >:(

I would love to see some real honesty injected into things.

What's even more shameful is that this kind of thing actually needs to be regulated because people don't have the decency to be honest...

Sigh... No hope...
9040
Can you remind me about this on December 18th? (I'm out of the country for a while and can't get to doing anything like this right now.)

This is some of the kind of stuff that I love doing. Yes... I have a sick addiction to date and time calculations and manipulation...

I've posted some code here:

http://kewlaid.net/2...c-and-no-time-count/

The post is NSFW though, but the code works -- a quick hack to add times for songs. Not sure if it will be useful for you at the moment, but do remind me later and I'll get something done.
9041
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Detect and warn when any key is stuck
« Last post by Renegade on December 07, 2010, 01:49 AM »
I'd say just get a new keyboard.

I have a problem (that I need Dell to fix) where my laptop keyboard light for the Caps Lock doesn't light up, and I can see having a kind of utility to notify onscreen about the current state, but it really seems like a better solution to get Dell to fix it.

i.e. The root problem is the hardware, so fixing that would be best.
9042
General Software Discussion / Re: S.T.A.L.K.E.R. for 99 cents
« Last post by Renegade on December 07, 2010, 01:39 AM »
<rant mode=no where near Renegades' efforts>

I would have grabbed it except for Microsoft's $#^@$% up website.    :mad:

For some reason I had to go through the LiveID signup twice, entering the exact same information before it would acknowledge it and send the verification email.
Then when I've verified myself, I click on the link to buy the game and proceed to checkout - only to be told I should sign up for XBOX Live, even though I'm trying to log in with my newly acquired LiveID - and indeed have not logged out from when I verified myself.
When I try to log in it tells me there is a problem with logging me out!

Cleared the caches, run CCleaner, try IE on both the PC and in a VM - same sh!t.  Clear everything again, reboot and try for one last time.

An hour after I started this fiasco it finally acknowledges that I can log in, so off I go to the checkout to pay for it........only to find their #%$@&^%@%^ website now doesn't like the country I'm in!  ie. Marketplace doesn't like Australia even though it's in the list of countries that can use the download client.

How F***ING hard would it have been to announce it's not available for download in my country right on the F***ING first web page?

I really, really hope that someone drops a tactical nuke on Redmond - collateral damage be damned!
</rant>

No. You're doing quite well~! :D

And...

A-f**king-men~!

Unfortunately, the Games for Windows Marketplace website is not available in your region.

I read the first post. Go off to get it but THIS time I use Australia instead of the US as that got hosed. So... Hosed as 4wd notes.

Should have read down further here first.

So, went back, used the "US" account. Got done up to the point to enter credit card info... JFC! How f**king hard is it to understand that it's possible to have credit cards in multiple countries~! I have cards and accounts in 6 countries, but no addressed one in the US. :( Who cares WHERE the money comes from?

Isn't it about getting the sale?

I've been through this a million times though. Buying online is simply hosed. It's one of the hardest things in the world to do. It's nigh unto impossible. There was another thread ranting about this...

Actually, it's not about buying online. That's not impossible. What's impossible is for most people that develop websites to have a brain and use it. Or it might be about people in human resource departments not having the intelligence to not hire people that are legally brain dead when they're looking for web people... Or perhaps it's at the executive/managerial level with directors that don't understand the idea that "selling" involved being able, and more importantly, willing to take money from people that want to give it to you. These people's mothers must have been oxygen deprived while they were pregnant with them... Otherwise they'd understand things like "money good".
9043
Living Room / Re: The SSL certificate industry is a messy business
« Last post by Renegade on December 06, 2010, 11:24 PM »
I've been really impressed with StartSSL so far.

The website is a shambles as far as design goes, but the certs work. So far the cert I'm using on my private webmail site is smooth. Haven't had a single user comment on it.
9044
Living Room / Re: Five Reasons Why People Hate Apple
« Last post by Renegade on December 06, 2010, 10:51 PM »
And with the jailbreaking option, the ipad is the most flexible and powerful tablet you can get right now.

I'd be careful there. Even with a jail-broken iOS device, Android, bada (when it hits the tablet), and Windows 7 are going to be more flexible by far.

Apple has iOS itself locked down. Compared to the other mobile OSes out there, it's hamstrung. You can do a lot with it, but it's simply not nearly as flexible as the others.

Apple locks things out until it can come out with all the most profitable stuff by itself, then once they have the market sewn up, they *might* open things a bit. This is just their typical modus operandi with iOS.

On a side note, having looked into Retina displays, I believe that they really are better than AMOLED and Super AMOLED.

The companies behind the OSes have fundamentally different philosophies. Apple believes in opening up a few things. The others believe in restricting a few things. The upshot from Apple is that everything starts locked down or unavailable. i.e. "We'll let you do x, y, and z." On the other hand, you have the other guys saying, "We'd better lock this down because it could prove to be a potential security/privacy issue." It's a dictatorial vs. libertarian outlook.

If the CEOs or people in charge were historical figures, Steve Jobs would be Stalin while the others would be more like Ben Franklin (or similar).
9045
General Software Discussion / Re: create movies
« Last post by Renegade on December 04, 2010, 11:10 AM »
There is no easy way. Stuff like that requires software that takes a lot of skill to use.
9046
Living Room / Re: Five Reasons Why People Hate Apple
« Last post by Renegade on December 02, 2010, 08:00 PM »
if you don't fight it and let Apple do whatever it wants to do with your iphone/itunes, it usually works just fine

That same pitch can be made for sodomy in a prison shower... :)

Bwahahahahahaha~!


That was awesome~! :D
9047
Living Room / Re: Five Reasons Why People Hate Apple
« Last post by Renegade on December 01, 2010, 09:42 AM »
Kind of off-topic, but funny...


I took my mom & dad to Saigon Market today (I'm currently in Ho Chi Minh City), and we had a spin around looking at stuff.

I dropped by a booth that had some iTouch devices, and figured I'd ask how much they were... An 8 GB and a 32 GB model...

"300" for the 8 GB and "360" for the 32 GB models, respectively, she types into a calculator and shows me.

So I think, oh, 360,000 Vietnamese Dong (the currency here). Keep in mind that $1 USD = 20,000 VND...

That's about... ummm... $18.00 or so.

Meh. What's $20 or so? That's about what they're worth... I pull out my wallet and start to count out 360,000 VND.

"Dollars," she says. "360 dollars."

"Oh," I say. "Forget it."

:D

9048
Living Room / Re: It's NOT Vaporware!
« Last post by Renegade on December 01, 2010, 07:59 AM »
Let the bubblegum chewing begin.  Oh wait, "I'm all outta gum."

:D Remember the movie "They"? (Or was it "Them"?) Anyways, "I'm here to kick ass and chew bubblegum, and I'm all out of bubblegum. <opens fire>"
9049
Living Room / Re: Five Reasons Why People Hate Apple
« Last post by Renegade on December 01, 2010, 07:47 AM »

...I use it for great GPS, an amazing alarm clock, a great portable pdf reader, a decent music player (I haven't tried the video playing and tv out stuff yet).  It's really great for those little things. 

GPS, clock, reader, music player. Little things.

It's funny that you mention that they're all little things. (See below for comments on input.)

That's pretty much what I use my phone for. Minus music and GPS though (GPS/map on odd occassions -- I already have 2 dedicated units).

I've only had my phone for a bit, so I'm still finding new things, but I don't see it as being much more than that.

The tablet form factor is rather limited, so it's kind of hard to do much on it anyways.

Still, a flexible keyboard can easily turn a tablet into a productivity tool, provided you have a stand for it and actual software that lets you be productive... Not just games and porn. Ooops... Sorry... No porn on iOS. You'll need to get an Android for that~! :P

(Couldn't resist.)

Okay, so the fruit pad is a sparkling work of art ... Well that's just Jim Dandy if the object was to hang it on the wall so folks could ogle it at parties. But what if you have to actually do something with it?

Hahahaha~! :D

Like (Um...) print a report that you worked on for all 10 hours of its (alleged) battery life. Best option, Email it to a Windows machine. Apple's network printing is a total train-wreck functionally speaking.

You've got a flair for understatement.

Apple printing is a train-wreck? Ahem... Apple connectivity is a train-wreck.

External USB drive? Stay connected? HA!

...But then again it's a "Media Consumption Device" so I guess you're not supposed to be able to get anything back off of it.

I thought it was an "Apple Store Consumption Device". ;)

But back to some previous comments -- they are very sharp looking devices.

But "consumption device" is perfectly correct. That's all they are really capable of at the moment. I expect that to change though. CPU will make all the difference. Once they get decent CPUs, speech regognition and voice recognition and identifying a voice amongst background sounds will become possible, which will entirely change the device input -- it will be a paradigm shift.

Also, if Microsoft would get off it's butt and make some of its technologies available at the consumer level, we'd have vast leaps in input technology, e.g. tactile screens.

Apple didn't start the tablet market -- but they did breathe life back into it.

I still have a lot of work to do before I can justify buying an iPad. But, it will come.
9050
Living Room / Re: The SSL certificate industry is a messy business
« Last post by Renegade on December 01, 2010, 07:07 AM »
damn app is ahead of me once again.

No doubt. I can't count how many times I read posts from app103 here or on Facebook and and up following links all over the place. She's a wealth of cool, new information.
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