This thread is dedicated to documenting the bad days of others. All in good fun, no malicious intent. [youtube]lRFckPyNHJs[/youtube]
Not directly in line, but I've got lots of enjoyment out of following Only in Russia @CrazyinRussia. https://t.co/RZudU4SySM https://t.co/Do1H6LXZT8 https://t.co/7ANQ3IfFB4
I laughed when she was telling him to get a car, and he pans over to his car in the parking lot (and not in a convenience store).
I have to replace an $8,000 water meter in Murfreesboro today. I have a sign off to use one kind of meter from a CUD inspector but the head of CUD wants a different kind. I also had a 3 guys dig a 300 ft sewer line yesterday and backfill it. The superintendent said the inspector saw it. The inspector calls and said we have to uncover it today because he did not see it. They have it 3 times so far with the bucket, tearing up what I paid them to do yesterday. So, my day has been fun so far. It can only get better.
I know the title of the video implies that he survived, but I'd bet money he's done. If not, he's been reduced to Butch Jones level of brain function.
The trap guy is stupid. I've got a couple of Conibear traps I used in my Great Groundhog War of 2013 I'd love to see him stick his face in.
For the technophiles. Putting up an effective internet billboard claiming that a site using login over HTTP is unhackable is generally not a good idea. Pretty much a textbook case of how not to set up a webserver. https://arstechnica.com/security/20...for-labeling-unencrypted-login-page-insecure/
Could have used the same SQL injection technique on a HTTPS login, so protocol makes no difference in that hack.
True, but saying "We have our own security system, and it has never been breached in more than 15 years" on a website doing login over HTTP, "secure" Credit Card transactions over HTTP, is vulnerable to easily preventable SQL Injections, storing user passwords in clear text, having detailed debugging enabled on a production server, etc. just isn't very smart. The icing on the cake was when hackers deleted the user tables in the database. I shouldn't laugh as it could very well kill the company depending on if/when they back up their data, but sniffing HTTP connections and SQL exploits are things you learn in an introduction to cyber security class.