the 2 things are not parallel and should never be treated that way.
ianal but the difference is that lying in court is a criminal offence called ~perjury~... requiring a separate criminal proceeding to resolve. a foul on the ball field is a rules violation that is administratively punished under the same rules during the same "proceeding" (the legal parallel is contempt of court).
the referee (who hands out fouls) in sports is theoretically impartial; the district attorney (who pursues indictments) isn't and has a vested interest in not calling "foul" on the law enforcement "players".
it's like the coach for the home team has taken over the job of referee. we wouldn't accept that in sports why do we accept it in court?
While i'm against doing this to the mentally ill to "let the demons out" I suspect that with the right subjects restrained for the trepanning tool it could be highly entertaining ... infact i'm sure that there are people that would pay to watch!
Brute Force Search Space Analysis: Search Space Depth (Alphabet): 26+26+10+33 = 95 Search Space Length (Characters): 26 characters Exact Search Space Size (Count): (count of all possible passwords with this alphabet size and up to this password's length) 2,663,234,997,260,162, 196,476,097,223,547,872, 948,519,727,017,017,120 Search Space Size (as a power of 10): 2.66 x 1051 Time Required to Exhaustively Search this Password's Space: Online Attack Scenario: (Assuming one thousand guesses per second) 8.47 hundred trillion trillion trillion centuries Offline Fast Attack Scenario: (Assuming one hundred billion guesses per second) 8.47 million trillion trillion centuries Massive Cracking Array Scenario: (Assuming one hundred trillion guesses per second) 8.47 thousand trillion trillion centuries
my password manager password shows the following results for "crackability" using his tool and it's easy to remember, a pain in the ass to type, but easy to remember.
Couple with your approach to storing pass words with his approach to generating memorable passwords and you're almost unhackable.
Funny how when the DOJ circumvents the letter of the law by lying about the facts, the law forced them to do it; But when Aereo complies with the letter of the law, they're accused of deliberately circumventing it and slapped down.
That Keene happened AFTER Ferguson ... in the aftermath of a similar incident the Keene PD acted with the clear benefit of hindsight which is always 20/20.
Maybe we can attribute their more restrained response to them learning a lesson from someone else's mistake instead of attributing it to a racial motivation.
But hey if we did that ... it wouldn't be "news" would it ?
the nsa guy says it's legal ... he is telling the truth. laws were passed, executive orders issued and court precedents set that makes it all "legal".
it's also unconstitutional, but until SCOTUS rules on the laws in place and declares them unconstitutional it remains "legal".
"you're going to find that many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view." Obi-Wan Kenobi and from the NSA point of view everything they are doing is perfectly in accordance with the law.
Possibly ... but that assumes they used the same accounts for their subsequent predations. If the predators indeed used the same accounts, then MM clearly facilitated their actions. I seriously doubt this was the case ...
Doesn't a "war" require a declaration of Congress to actually be a war ? And since no war has been declared by Congress, how does the Executive reasonably use the provisions of war to justify unconstitutional activity?
Put simply ... Even if you agree with the prima facie argument that in time of war the Executive has the power to ignore the Constitution; Since Congress never declared war and thus no state of war exists, the provisions of war that grant the Executive the power to ignore the Constitution don't apply and any argument that they do is entirely specious. Simply calling something a "war" doesn't make it one.
No, let's blame the guy who blew the whistle on it. Incredible.
Interesting that you think this is incredible Mike ... There is a long and storied tradition of blaming the messenger. I think it's inevitable that the messenger will be blamed by the powers that be and their hired shills.
it's commentary on the efficacy of the FCC commenting process. We all know the FCC is, statistically speaking, most likely to do whatever the moneyed interests want without regard to the interests and opinions express by the public commentary.
Perhaps this is his way of illustrating his recognition of the probable futility of commenting, and at the same time participating in the process. Like writing "Maytag Repairman" on your ballot ...
On the post: Megaupload Programmer Takes Plea Deal, Though It's Still Unclear What Criminal Law He Violated
It's the sort of law enforcement
On the post: Baltimore PD Hides Its Stingray Usage Under A Pen Register Order; Argues There's Really No Difference Between The Two
Re: Re: Liars
ianal but the difference is that lying in court is a criminal offence called ~perjury~... requiring a separate criminal proceeding to resolve.
a foul on the ball field is a rules violation that is administratively punished under the same rules during the same "proceeding" (the legal parallel is contempt of court).
the referee (who hands out fouls) in sports is theoretically impartial; the district attorney (who pursues indictments) isn't and has a vested interest in not calling "foul" on the law enforcement "players".
it's like the coach for the home team has taken over the job of referee.
we wouldn't accept that in sports why do we accept it in court?
On the post: Children Are Leading The Cord Cutting Revolution
Drilling holes in peoples heads ....
On the post: Children Are Leading The Cord Cutting Revolution
Re: Re:
On the post: Children Are Leading The Cord Cutting Revolution
Bravo Sir !!!!
On the post: David Cameron Says People Aren't Radicalized By Poverty Or Foreign Policy, But By Free Speech Online, So ISPs Agree To Censor Button
How long until calling it censorship is considered an "extremist" position as well?
On the post: DailyDirt: How Many Passwords Do You Know?
Re: Re:
Search Space Depth (Alphabet): 26+26+10+33 = 95
Search Space Length (Characters): 26 characters
Exact Search Space Size (Count):
(count of all possible passwords
with this alphabet size and up
to this password's length) 2,663,234,997,260,162,
196,476,097,223,547,872,
948,519,727,017,017,120
Search Space Size (as a power of 10): 2.66 x 1051
Time Required to Exhaustively Search this Password's Space:
Online Attack Scenario:
(Assuming one thousand guesses per second) 8.47 hundred trillion trillion trillion centuries
Offline Fast Attack Scenario:
(Assuming one hundred billion guesses per second) 8.47 million trillion trillion centuries
Massive Cracking Array Scenario:
(Assuming one hundred trillion guesses per second) 8.47 thousand trillion trillion centuries
On the post: DailyDirt: How Many Passwords Do You Know?
Re:
Check out Steve Gibsons article on generating passwords that are memorable and hard to guess https://www.grc.com/haystack.htm
my password manager password shows the following results for "crackability" using his tool and it's easy to remember, a pain in the ass to type, but easy to remember.
Couple with your approach to storing pass words with his approach to generating memorable passwords and you're almost unhackable.
On the post: Eric Holder Says He Regrets Lying To A Judge And Saying A Reporter Was A 'Co-Conspirator' But The Law Made Him Do It
Holder vs. Aereo
On the post: A Tale of Two Riots: 'Hands Up, Don't Shoot' Vs. 'Bring Out The BearCat'
Re: Re: Double Std maybe-- but let's not forget
Maybe we can attribute their more restrained response to them learning a lesson from someone else's mistake instead of attributing it to a racial motivation.
But hey if we did that ... it wouldn't be "news" would it ?
On the post: 5 Year Old Who Drew A Gun In Crayon Forced To Sign No-Suicide Contract With School
oh my ...
On the post: Nintendo Bricks Wii U Consoles Unless Owners Agree To New EULA
IANAL but ...
So then ... this is just propaganda and intimidation. For my money I say click "Agree" and ignore it!
On the post: New York City Dept. Of Education Suspends Special Needs Instructor For Helping Student With A Kickstarter Project
I'd like to say this surprises me ...
God help us.
On the post: Another Story Of A 'Fake' Brilliant Inventor? Is 'Scorpion Walter O'Brien' A Real Computer Security Genius?
Bullshittery aside ...
On the post: NSA Agent Is Oh So Shy About Being Filmed/Questioned In Public
legano, no legano ... is grey area
it's also unconstitutional, but until SCOTUS rules on the laws in place and declares them unconstitutional it remains "legal".
"you're going to find that many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view." Obi-Wan Kenobi and from the NSA point of view everything they are doing is perfectly in accordance with the law.
On the post: Horrifying 'Rape Scam' Case Leads To Questionable Ruling About Blaming A Website For Failing To Warn Of Rapists
Re: in the position to turn that access off
On the post: Released Memos Justifying Warrantless Wiretapping Point To Limitless Executive Branch Authority
Questions ....
Put simply ... Even if you agree with the prima facie argument that in time of war the Executive has the power to ignore the Constitution; Since Congress never declared war and thus no state of war exists, the provisions of war that grant the Executive the power to ignore the Constitution don't apply and any argument that they do is entirely specious. Simply calling something a "war" doesn't make it one.
On the post: Software Company Loses Trademark Case Against Batman Over Fictional Software
Re:
On the post: Business Insider Ridiculously Blames Ed Snowden For All The Damage The NSA Has Caused
No, let's blame the guy who blew the whistle on it. Incredible.
On the post: Guy Files Dishwasher User Manual As An FCC Comment On Net Neutrality
Perhaps ...
We all know the FCC is, statistically speaking, most likely to do whatever the moneyed interests want without regard to the interests and opinions express by the public commentary.
Perhaps this is his way of illustrating his recognition of the probable futility of commenting, and at the same time participating in the process. Like writing "Maytag Repairman" on your ballot ...
Next >>