Conservapedia
Perhaps most entertaining is Jon Swift's coverage of Conservapedia, which contains links to many of the Science Bloggers' commentaries.
Posted by Lippard at 2/23/2007 12:34:00 PM 2 comments
Posted by Lippard at 2/21/2007 04:42:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: David Paszkiewicz, law, religion
Posted by Lippard at 2/21/2007 09:35:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: ethics, law, police abuse and corruption, politics
This may be surprising to hear: I am an employee at a major airline and I just recieved an e-mail that said we now have access to the TSA no-fly list, selectee list, and cleared list. I just accessed it and found it to contain thousands of names, DOB, SSN#s, drivers licesense #'s, military ID #'s, addresses, and even home phone #'s. The TSA just made this list and all of this information readily available to thousands of employees at my airline (and probably others). I think that previously this list was only available to ticket agents, but now it is available to every employee.Nice.
I find it quite disturbing that any airline employee has access to this information, and that many of the ppl on the cleared list have to give up there SSN# and other information.
Posted by Lippard at 2/20/2007 07:34:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: security, technology, TSA incompetence
The instructor knocks on the front door, shouting, "DEA! Police! We have a search warrant!"Balko quotes his basketball coach: "You play the way you practice."The next thing you know you're inside, clearing rooms like a SWAT team on COPS, firing only at targets with odd numbers. The even-numbered targets could be the good guys, even children. Everyone shoots at the dog. It's covered with paint-ball splatters.
Posted by Lippard at 2/20/2007 07:22:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: dogs, police abuse and corruption
"Your body is your property," she warns girls, "Think about the first home you hope to own. You wouldn't want someone to throw a rock through the front window, would you?"The blogosphere is generating lots of handy corrolaries:
We all know it is the husband who is supposed to throw rocks through the windows of your home. This should be done frequently, and ONLY through the same window - never through the back door or other windows.(Via Framed: Discourse and Democracy and Matthew Yglesias.)
* * *
Your body is your property. Think about the first home you hope to own. You want to have a big party and invite all your friends over.
* * *
Your body is your property ... Think about the first home you hope to own. If you ever get in trouble with money, you can always rent it out for use by strangers.
* * *
Your body is your property ... Think about the first home you hope to own. You want the carpet to match the drapes.
* * *
Your body is your property. Think about the first home you hope to own. Odds are it's going to be a fixer-upper and will need some major improvements to make it attractive. A larger front porch, for example.
Posted by Lippard at 2/19/2007 04:38:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 2/19/2007 04:05:00 PM 8 comments
Labels: atheism, Mormons, religion, Scientology
Posted by Lippard at 2/19/2007 03:50:00 PM 2 comments
Labels: David Paszkiewicz, education, law, politics, religion
“I don’t know what they will be but I can predict with a high degree of probability that it will happen,” he said.The new Apple AirPort Extreme for 802.11n wireless networks demonstrates Swainson's point quite vividly. The device supports IPv6, and the default setting is for the device to set up an IPv6 tunnel over the IPv4 Internet and to provide IPv6 addresses to hosts on the local network with IPv6 enabled. For those using the device as their local firewall (which I'd argue is not a great idea--it's not really adequate to the task), while it will reject most incoming IPv4 connections, it will allow all IPv6 connections through. For those not using it as a firewall, if their actual firewall allows the IPv6 tunnel (and most firewalls allow all inbound connections out, which would allow the tunnel to be established), the tunnel then becomes a path through the firewall.
"This is not something you can test in the lab, it’s something that emerges through practice.”
Swainson’s comments on IPv6 were part of a broader theme addressing the emerging complexities in IT infrastructure and their more complex insecurities.
“We’re talking about new complexities on top of existing complexities. As networks expand to include remote device types and additional applications [they] produce a wide variety of security threats,” he said.
Posted by Lippard at 2/19/2007 07:40:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: security, technology
Posted by Lippard at 2/17/2007 10:35:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: copyright