Ecology (of minute animals) living in the spaces between individual sand grains in the soil or aquatic sediments. "the interstitial fauna of marine sands"
Yuk! So Interstitial ads are like some sort of scum in the sand?
Re: Re: They are asking for insecurity, even demanding it
She should be a pro. And definitely more experienced then the other candidates. After all, she's already had eight years experience running the country.
Indecisive: I can neither confirm nor deny that I can confirm nor deny that I am unable to make a decision without flipping back and forth between two extremes.
Put your stuff on a private server, running Windows no less, so that it is accessible to China, Russia, Anonymous, and hackers. But somehow, it won't be accessible to US investigators.
EVEN IF it really were just a millennials issue (and it is not), that should be cause for concern when we are near the start of 2016.
The number of 'millennials' is only growing. The number of non-millennials is only shrinking. It is somewhat unlikely that they can cause a rise in the number of people born pre-2000. (Unless David Cohen, Comcast's magician, can convince congress to make this happen -- but nope, he's not a lobbyist, no, nosiree.)
Cue the email stating that Comcast has NOT screwed up. This incident is consistent with Comcast's uniquely well known industry-leading reputation for customer service.
And that David Cohen is not a magician. Money and magic are not the same thing when it comes to congress.
Another reason I just quit entirely watching cable, was the Bugs.
After a long, looooong, Loooooooooooooooooong commercial break . . .
the show starts up, and what happens? A bunch of more ads at the bottom of the screen appear with people walking around trying to sell you on watching more commercials that are punctuated by content programming, in another time slot on the same channel.
And plenty of times, these annoying program-covering ads cover actual important content from the program you are watching. Bits of text on a ransom note that is intended for the audience to read, for example.
I got so sick of this. My TiVo can't fix it. I'll just quit watching.
But now my TiVo is putting its own advertising in my face, so I'm on the very verge of getting rid of it for a different device. This crap, on a device I paid $400 for and continue to pay monthly for. Disgusting. Absolutely sickening. Vermin. Parasites. But even worse, I'll call them . . . advertisers!
The alphabet soup agencies might be secretly cursing Barton. But they can't say so. Because the secret cursing is a classified secret -- because it would reveal intelligence gathering methods. Methods which Barton wants to take away from the TLAs. (three letter acronyms)
On the post: TV Industry Starts Running Fewer Ads To Combat Netflix, Cord Cutting
Re: Re: It's not just the ads, it's the BUGs
Yuk! So Interstitial ads are like some sort of scum in the sand?
On the post: Chipotle Exposes Private Data By Sending HR E-mails Via Unowned Domain, Doesn't See The Problem
Re: Small silver lining
At least they didn't sick the lawyers. Yet.
But now that they have egg on their face, and are exposed as incompetent fools, that lawyers may yet be unleashed.
On the post: Hillary Clinton Joins The 'Make Silicon Valley Break Encryption' Bandwagon
Re: Re: They are asking for insecurity, even demanding it
On the post: Hillary Clinton Joins The 'Make Silicon Valley Break Encryption' Bandwagon
Re: Re: When?
On the post: Hillary Clinton Joins The 'Make Silicon Valley Break Encryption' Bandwagon
Re:
Insecure Security.
Put your stuff on a private server, running Windows no less, so that it is accessible to China, Russia, Anonymous, and hackers. But somehow, it won't be accessible to US investigators.
On the post: Hillary Clinton Joins The 'Make Silicon Valley Break Encryption' Bandwagon
They are asking for insecurity, even demanding it
What they are asking for is for tech companies to make their products insecure.
Whenever they say something like . . .
"to make it accessible to law enforcement",
they are also saying
"to make it accessible to hackers".
Always point that fact out.
If Apple, Google, or the government can get into your data, then so can China, Russia, Anonymous, and others.
The reason for secure encryption is not (necessarily) for the purpose of evading law enforcement. It is for the purpose of evading hackers.
You can't have it both ways. Secure against hackers, open to government snoops.
On the post: TV Industry Starts Running Fewer Ads To Combat Netflix, Cord Cutting
Re: And they are still ignoring facts.
EVEN IF it really were just a millennials issue (and it is not), that should be cause for concern when we are near the start of 2016.
The number of 'millennials' is only growing. The number of non-millennials is only shrinking. It is somewhat unlikely that they can cause a rise in the number of people born pre-2000. (Unless David Cohen, Comcast's magician, can convince congress to make this happen -- but nope, he's not a lobbyist, no, nosiree.)
On the post: Why Does The Press Have To Keep Fixing All Of Comcast's Screw Ups?
Re: Poke that Bear
Cue the email stating that Comcast has NOT screwed up. This incident is consistent with Comcast's uniquely well known industry-leading reputation for customer service.
And that David Cohen is not a magician. Money and magic are not the same thing when it comes to congress.
On the post: Why Does The Press Have To Keep Fixing All Of Comcast's Screw Ups?
Re: Short term vs Long term costs
Until they have an irrevocably bad, inexorably horrible reputation that can never be changed in the mind of the public.
On the post: WIPO Gives EFF Control Over Bogus Domain Used To Distribute Keyloggers And Other Malware
Re:
On the post: TV Industry Starts Running Fewer Ads To Combat Netflix, Cord Cutting
It's not just the ads, it's the BUGs
After a long, looooong, Loooooooooooooooooong commercial break . . .
the show starts up, and what happens? A bunch of more ads at the bottom of the screen appear with people walking around trying to sell you on watching more commercials that are punctuated by content programming, in another time slot on the same channel.
And plenty of times, these annoying program-covering ads cover actual important content from the program you are watching. Bits of text on a ransom note that is intended for the audience to read, for example.
I got so sick of this. My TiVo can't fix it. I'll just quit watching.
But now my TiVo is putting its own advertising in my face, so I'm on the very verge of getting rid of it for a different device. This crap, on a device I paid $400 for and continue to pay monthly for. Disgusting. Absolutely sickening. Vermin. Parasites. But even worse, I'll call them . . . advertisers!
On the post: Manhattan DA's Office Serves Up Craptastic White Paper Asking For A Ban On Encryption
Let me fix that for you
Let me fix that for you:
On the post: Manhattan DA's Office Serves Up Craptastic White Paper Asking For A Ban On Encryption
Let me fix that for you
On the post: Senator McCain Promises To Introduce Legislation To Backdoor Encryption, Make Everyone Less Safe
Re: Re: Why Won't The Backdoor Concept Die?
Please do not be so pessimistic.
With a bit of luck the law abiding citizens of all other nations will get to use broken encryption also.
On the post: Senator McCain Promises To Introduce Legislation To Backdoor Encryption, Make Everyone Less Safe
Re: Re: Re: so, kill all the mathematicians?
The US education system has had that goal for some time now.
On the post: Senator McCain Promises To Introduce Legislation To Backdoor Encryption, Make Everyone Less Safe
Re: Re:
With backdoored encryption, or no encryption, the government CAN protect voting.
It is in the public interest to protect the voters from the wrong candidate being elected.
On the post: Is There Any Evidence In The World That Would Convince Intelligence Community That More Surveillance Isn't The Answer?
Re: Re:
But someone needs to be watching the watchers.
On the post: Rep. Barton Demands The FCC Filter ISIS From The Internet
Re:
On the post: Rep. Barton Demands The FCC Filter ISIS From The Internet
Re:
And they are not mutually exclusive either.
On the post: Is There Any Evidence In The World That Would Convince Intelligence Community That More Surveillance Isn't The Answer?
Re: Re:
Next >>