NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: List of falsehoods programmers believe in
NullCharacter's comments
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: The Silent Anniversary: Fifteen Years Since Our Last Major Crash
And like you, I don't necessarily fear death, but I definitely don't want to see death coming. More than anything, I fear helplessness.
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: 3 Out of 4 Millennials Have Received Financial Help from Parents After College
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: The XSS Game by Google
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are the best personal project websites you've seen?
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: House Intelligence Committee Letter to Obama on Snowden [pdf]
As it stands, there is zero evidence (from either side) that Snowden complained to the proper channels.
And why would he when his plan was to leave the country with 1.5 million classified documents?
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: House Intelligence Committee Letter to Obama on Snowden [pdf]
The dude planned this for years, he said it himself. He had plenty of time to simply take evidence of what he was going to blow the whistle on. I don't understand your argument.
> impossible to expose the information in any other way
Except for the many oversight channels that exists which there has yet to be any evidence he used.
> For example, there may have been evidence of other crimes, and there would be no way he could sift through the documents while still working.
If I understand your argument correctly, it's: "it's possible something here is illegal so let's just take all of it." I shouldn't have to explain why that doesn't jive.
> Also, he recognized that he needed to leak slowly in order to keep the story afloat, or else he would get buried under propaganda and forgotten, as has happened to other whistleblowers that released all at once.
None of this addresses the fact that it seems he did a recursive pull of supersecretnsadomain.gov and deuced out to China under the pretenses of whistleblowing.
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: House Intelligence Committee Letter to Obama on Snowden [pdf]
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: House Intelligence Committee Letter to Obama on Snowden [pdf]
People claim this dude was a genius, make him out as some sort of tech/hacker savant, so why not make the slightest effort to show the world you really are a whistleblower?
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: House Intelligence Committee Letter to Obama on Snowden [pdf]
The same article you link says Snowden "tried to go through channels". It's not "patently false". It's "he claimed he tried". Meanwhile, investigations show only one email he sent regarding general clarification on NSA authorities but zero raising any concern or complaints: https://news.vice.com/article/nsa-finds-new-snowden-emails-b...
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: House Intelligence Committee Letter to Obama on Snowden [pdf]
Then why not bring proof? 1.5 million documents and he can't bring the emails he sent? No, we saw the emails (that is to say, one email: https://news.vice.com/article/nsa-finds-new-snowden-emails-b...) that were sent to OGC, and nothing in them indicated he was raising any concerns.
> How do you verify this? you can't
He took 1.5 million documents and we've seen what, maybe 100-200 documents and slides over the course of three years? What's the other 1,499,800 million classified documents about?
> Meanwhile the NSA was illegally infringing the privacy of almost 310 million americans
Fine, if he had only taken documents pertaining to his qualms then there would have been a much greater chance of him being labeled a whistleblower or at least be met with some leniency even if he didn't in fact follow the proper channels.
> the activities were NOT lawful (as in legally defensible when challenged in a court), they were not overseen by anyone and some of them were unrelated to intelligence.
1,499,800 documents that likely have absolutely zero to do with what he was supposed to be blowing the whistle on.
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: Home Computers Connected to the Internet Aren't Private, Court Rules
Basically, the only people they ended up busting were people who for some reason decided it was a good idea to download and run an executable being served by their favorite CP site on the "darknet".
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: Don't like Brexit? We have a plan
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: How hackers hack you using simple social engineering [video]
Cool dude, too. Great class if you ever get the chance to take it at Black Hat.
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: Revealed: US spy operation that manipulates social media (2011)
The article mentioned nothing about manipulating "social media" (like reddit or HN as the headline would lead you to believe), in fact it mentions that none of the correspondence will even be in English. All this is is creating fake personas on extremist/underground forums as a source of intelligence.
This Internet is so quick to outrage.
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: Interactive Salary/Equity Chart for Jobs Offered in the San Francisco Bay Area
I'm hoping to have more equity granted to me in the form of options in the coming months as the company turns a profit.
Otherwise, life is good.
NullCharacter | 9 years ago | on: There’s Nothing Magical About Breakfast
NullCharacter | 10 years ago | on: License Plate Readers Exposed – How Public Safety Agencies Responded
NullCharacter | 10 years ago | on: Destroy all hiring processes
I've also found it strange that it didn't matter what my degree was in, just having one wold have secured me interviews. A theoretical degree in Turfgrass Science would have benefited equally as a proper degree in CompSci.
NullCharacter | 10 years ago | on: On Botnets and Streaming Music Services
> All civilization was just an effort to impress the opposite sex.