Archive for November, 2006

What do you call a hacker from Australia?

A hackeroo, but of course ;)

Kramer’s racist slur – a somewhat alternative view (Michael Richards goes amok)

The funny actor Michael Richards, you know; “Kramer” from the late hit sit-com “Seinfeld”, goes off on a racist slur on stage. I don’t think that it was intended to be racist from the start, as you can sense that he is trying to go off at the hecklers in the audience, but it is still not “ok”. I mean, you shouldn’t be held accountable for such statements in a court of law (due to freedom of speech) in my personal opinion, but it’s still not “ok” in my book.

A commenter on YouTube had a point when he wrote:
” but its ok for them to call him cracker ass…

go to his show and watch, don’t heckle. rediculous. if you dont like it leave. uncalled for my ass.

chris rock would call that guy a n*gger too. watch chris rock’s stuff. He makes fun of people just like that who can’t stop talking.

If only he hadn’t been so stupid ass to call him that, and used something a little more tasteful to get back at him. what a shame.”

Touché!

Richards should have made a George Carlin-like comeback and bury the hecklers in their chairs, now Mr Richards just ended up looking like a fool. Yeah, you should be able to say whatever you want up on stage, and yes – hecklers should thrown out with a pitchfork and yes I think it’s ridicolous that certain words are paria, but I should say that this particular stand-up is one of the many reasons to why certain words after all are paria in the view of the general public. (Apart from the PC-panic showing up once and again.)

We could go into a detailed discussion/conflict regarding the hypocrisy about hizzing at some words, but saying the same things with another “dress-code” and we can also discuss that these words are not a disease, but a mere symptom of something being very very wrong. If there wasn’t something wrong, you’d be able to say any possible racist slur possible and no-one would raise an eyebrow.

With this said, google “racist slur” and you’ll be taken to “the database of racist slurs” and also a full wikipedia entry with various racist slurs. Not for the faint hearted, but why do we really react?!

Aren’t we citizen of the global village yet?!

Playstation 3 & The Ladies of eBay

DVRDude @ Digg wrote the following: “I noticed women of ebay posing provocatively — presumably to boost sales. How did this come about? In an effort to limit fraudulent listings, ebay is requiring PS3 and Wii sellers to photographs of receipts, user names, and consoles… So a few entrepreneurs must have recalled their Advertising 101 ’sex sells’ lesson. I took tons of screen grabs!”

A valid observation, yes indeed – what “DVRDude” didn’t observe was to be prepared to handle the visitor numbers a digg would bring. Great video-clip, thanks for that – but a “less great” idea to embed the video-clip you uploaded to YouTube on a webserver that couldn’t handle the load ;)

Fact remains: These eBay auctions really show how the times have changed. (Conclusion: I don’t remember when half-naked girls were used for selling second hand items) It doesn’t take much time / marketing-resources to figure out what sells and what does not. In my personal curiosity I wonder if the eBay-auctions with half-naked ladies got higher end-bids than the ones without these bells n’ whistles (that’s a double pun btw;)).

As the song goes: “Mad World”

IP-address tracing for the masses – Geotargeting+Google Maps=True

A new mashup-service has opened up on http://www.ip-adress.com , which combines the geographical IP-address database (stores the geographical information for the IP-address your computer uses right now on the Internet) from MaxMind and Google Maps.

The site is worth a try, if not for the novelty of it! If you have never used a trace-tool, this is an easy start to discover the “hidden” world of the Internet.

Telia Sonera customers’ email down since yesterday

According to swedish IT-news agency “IDG“, a third of the broadband giant Telia Sonera’s customers email-services are down since yesterday. However, reports speaks of trouble since last thursday.

I don’t want to be a “I told you so”-kind of person, but if your email is truly important for you – then spend 10 euros a year on a commercial service at an email-provider of your choice.

Not only do you get independent of your broadband company, you also get to keep your email-address if you ever switch providers of your broadband.

Another plague; “Hi, it’s *insert name here*”-spam

A new trend within organized crime is “pump and dump”-techniques for low-rated stock. This behaviour is about to surpass the regular porn and viagra spam-mails we all get in our inboxes.

Pump and dump basically works in this way; A spammer finds a low rated stock and buys up a large volume of stock. Then he sends out spam-mails about this company’s stock, saying that it is the next great thing and when more and more people start to buy this stock, the price per stock increases (naturally) and the spammer can sell off his shares with a good profit.

It is understandable that criminals are using this technique, as it is a low risk and very profitable area of doing business for them. However, this is a plague for us server-administrators and end-users out there, who gets our inboxes clogged up with this crap. I have noticed that the emails that has the subject in the topic of this post; “Hi, it’s *insert name here*” seem to be much harder for Spam Assassin to filter out than even some picture spam that is floating around.

Woe humanity – what a sad day; Spammers are learning that our bayes-filters… :-P

I am now a proud fonero

“Fonero” – what the hell is that?! Yes, if you haven’t heard about this term before you might be a bit confused, but fear not. “Fon” is a spanish-based award-winning wifi-community where you can get free or cheap wifi-access (meaning that you make money on your own FON access-point) wherever there might be a Fon wifi-router around. The Fon “what-is” webpage sums this up pretty well;

“FON is the largest WiFi community in the world. Our members share their wireless Internet access at home and, in return, enjoy free WiFi wherever they find another Fonero’s Access Point.”

Watch the above video for a short run-through on what FON is all about (I am sooooo sorry for the South Park ripoff though :-P )

Now you might think to yourself: -”Aren’t there any security concerns with sharing my wifi with others?!” My answer to this is… no. This text from the FON webpage sums it up pretty well for you:

“La Fonera offers you two wireless network signals (SSIDs), a private and a public one. The private signal is encrypted and offers you complete privacy.

The public signal will be accessible to Foneros only. This signal is the one that turns your broadband connection into a FON Access Point.

Furthermore, all Foneros connecting to the public WiFi signal within the FON Community are registered users. They need to identify themselves by a username and password.

Running an Access Point with La Fonera is not only secure but also easy to control. You can choose the amount of bandwidth you want to share.”

On top of this you can limit the speed allocated to the users on your FON SSID.

In essence; Martin Varsavsky, the founder and Chief Executive Officer of FON, has struck gold when it comes to having and going through with a brilliant idea! He also managed to get funds and support from both Google and Skype, which speaks well for the future of the FON-network. A note in this context is that Google helps FON out with the technical infrastructure.

My personal experience with FON is that it is pretty easy to set up. If you have a DSL-modem, Internet access directly from your ISP through a TP-cable (twisted pair) or through cable-modem it is no sweat to get it to run. The Fon access-point will then get it’s IP-address automatically (via DHCP) from the source it is connected to through it’s Internet-port and then the rest of the information how to get rolling is stated in the information packed with your router-package. The Fon access-point even works in a NAT if you run this at your office / home, though this might mean that you have to go into the access-point and edit a couple of settings regarding which network segment the access-point is in etc.

I really didn’t have any problems besides a bug in my Intel wifi-card sitting in my laptop related to the card’s energy-saving mode. (This isn’t fixed even with the latest drivers even if you said it would be, shame on you Intel.)

Apart from the mishap mentioned above, my first week being a Fonero has gone without a glitch. The access-point I got from FON works well, I can utilize my entire allocated bandwidth from my ISP and the access-point seem to be able to handle high bandwidth and durable datastreams. All protocols work fine, protocols demanding low latency such as server-management via SSH works as good as it would through my TP cable-based connection.

Another important aspect of joining a service is the support you get if something goes wrong, and I can say that the support at FON are knowledgeable and friendly, so if you ever run into a problem you can count on getting help from them.

Do you find all of this interesting?! Then don’t hesitate and join the Fonera network to either get free wifi-access wherever you are (Linus), or make a buck on sharing your Internet connection with the world (Bill)!!! (I am a “Linus”)

Take care everyone!!!

The friendly Dreamhost guys gets interviewed at ISPcon

The co-founders of Dreamhost, Josh&Dallas, gets interviewed by the ISPcon-moderator Joey deVilla, where Dallas&Josh talks about Dreamhost’s brilliant affiliate program, and how it gives them revenue despite their crazy offers and high affiliate payout.

A personal reflection on this is how friendly and down to earth they both seem, it is such a relief to see a bunch of “caring geeks” (yeah yeah, I know… :D ) doing what they love, and making money out of providing the Internet community with such a great service! :)

“Level 3 floored by robbery” – Halloween came early this year…

The Registry writes:

“Level 3, the supposedly secure back bone provider, has lost all services at its Braham Street data centre thanks to a robbery.

The company refused to speak to the Register this morning but many of its customers have been in touch.

According to Level 3 customers thieves got into the building on Braham Street, E1, and stole core router cards.

An email sent by Level 3 to its customers said only: “There was a security breach in our Braham St gateway early this morning. A number of service affecting cards were removed without authority from live equipment. This has resulted in the loss of IP and voice services to a number of customers at Braham St. We are currently attempting to restore service as quickly as possible. We will issue further updates as information becomes available.”

We were told no spokesperson was available or likely to be available.

Other technology companies hit by the downtime include easyspace.com.

The theft has raised fears that data centres and large IT departments in the City of London could be the target of an organised gang – last month Easynet’s centre on nearby Brick Lane suffered a similar robbery.

In other news BT Broadband suffered a major failure last night.

A spokesman for BT told the Reg: “About 100,000 BT Retail customers lost access late last night but normal service has now been restored. There was an authentication problem with our servers and it was not related to events at Level 3.”"

The above is a warning sign to all of you whom is looking for the cheapest deal possible. When you pay a little bit extra you not only pay for better network accessibility, but you also pay for physical security at the datacenter where your equipment is standing.

It is most unfortunate if thieves start to target datacenters, as this will bring the costs of hosting and co-location up, as well as it will bring uncertainty for us customers of these datacenters.

One of my sites, located at Easyspace, was down during a long night because of a said power-failure, though this article “Mystery surrounds Easynet ‘robbery’” and the attached customer letter really makes me wonder. I know that Easyspace and Easynet aren’t the same company(?), but I can’t help but put two and two together. Perhaps I’m conspiracy-minded, but it is a very fitting co-incident…

Perhaps the problems at Easyspace was linked to the issues with Easynet, I am not sure. But what is serious is that customers were in fact lied to regarding the status of their services. I can understand the “cover-up” from Easynet’s view point, but they will only lose in the long term by hiding the status of their organization’s services.

Tag-mania!!! :)

I am about to phase out the categories seen on the right-side bar of the side and use a tag-cloud at the bottom of every page displayed on the blog instead.
Why I do this is because I’ve got so many categories that it’s becoming un-sustainable to have a category-list which spans 4 times as long as the blog-post itself.

On top of the obvious visual and usability-aspects you of course have improved SEO with more linking and better navigation on through-out the entire Hypocrisy.nu.

To create the tag-cloud I’m using Ultimate Tag Warrior, a very nice and easy plugin for wordpress. Go to the plugin’s webpage to find out more.

If you see any bugs in this functionality or have some design viewpoints, then use the “Contact-Me” page above.

Thanks :)

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