Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | withinboredom's commentslogin

Wasn’t expecting to see Hebrew here today.

Eh, you know, when the conversation has devolved to the level of "Python is slower to develop in than PHP because of spaces or tabs", you have to bust out the Hebrew.

I see what you did there.

Say who? Literally the entire news media loves airing trials before they're proven innocent or guilty.

Which is one reason why the legacy news media is disregarded/disrespected by the general public. People have caught into the games that they play such as trying to paint people as pre convicted

Depends who it benefits

When I was in the military, they were very much against using technology and internet. Carrington was a thing, nukes/emp are a thing. There's no guarantee that technology would continue to work when the military is needed most.

I believe that must have changed a lot in the last 20 years for this to even be a discussion.


It'd be helpful to add a readme here instead of going to a pile of code.

> otherwise you can get a lot of random noise on the air interface, draining both your battery and data plan

I highly doubt you get "random" data over ipv6. There are more ipv6 addresses than there are atoms on the planet.


Yes, but they're not randomly distributed across the entire number space.

For example, receiving traffic from a given address is a pretty good indicator that there's somebody there possibly worth port scanning.

And where there has once been somebody, there or in the same neighborhood (subnet) might be somebody else, now or in the future.


Then it isn't random noise. It is determined by your own actions.

Or my predecessor/address space neighbor, or that of somebody using my wireless hotspot once, or that of me clicking a random link once and connecting to 671 affiliated advertisers's analytics servers...

I think a default policy of "no inbound connections" does makes sense for most mobile users. It should obviously be configurable.


You can also run commands when a user authenticates, grab their keys from github.com/username.keys, validate they're a user in a specific github group, then let them connect by outputing the keys, otherwise nothing to deny them access.

It's really great for ops teams where you want to give ssh access and manage it from github teams without needing a complex system.


1000 years from now, someone will discover these discs and wonder why we wrote text so small and so many times across the disk. They’ll say the rainbow is for artistic effect and the repetition for religious reasons.

Some people will argue that it is for primitive digital technology and be called crazy people. Nobody will be allowed to study it except for those who go to the right schools or have the right connections.


The problem is: you can’t prove it. We have no idea what “conscious” even means. It’s literally why the Turing Test exists.

It’s literally a tactic in divorce reddits. Go to all the lawyers in the city and get a meeting. Now they can’t work with your partner because they’ve given you advice.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: