Posts tagged with "scary"


Post #3666! Run away!

This latest Pointless Rubenerd Milestone post is so useless (and derivative) it should not be read by anyone. If you're just seeing this summary, leave it and move on. If you're subscribed in an aggregator and you can see the whole post, disregard it.

Firefox says "aggregator" isn't a word

Now that's out of the way we can get down to bidness. Despite missing it by a few posts (this is actually post number 3669!) this post is a celebration of reaching the completely pointless mystical post number 3666, which not only contains the super evil number 666, but the first digit even represents how many sixes proceed it! It's akin to a recursive acronym, but with integers in lieu of Latin alphabetic letters.

You know what isn't a recursive acronym, AFAIK? Saskatchewan.

This is only the fifth time such a milestone has been reached on Rubenerd.com; I blogged about this pointlessness (is that a word?) with my:

  1. WordPress 666 ID post in 2007,
  2. 666th post in 2008,
  3. 1666th post in 2009 and...
  4. 2666th post in 2010

And as I said on all of them, Elfen Lied scared the heck out of me.

That's right Mr Peabody

Surprisingly, blogging about this pointlessness also serves to show some historicalness (is that a word?), like an even cruder Wayback Machine. With each celebration of this pointlessness (is that a word?) I take a screenshot as proof of what we're up to here, and coincidently my theme has always changed in the intervening posts.

In another coincidence, Mac OS X Snow Leopard reports file sizes in KB not KiB, and the screenshot for today's entry is 66KB (61KiB). If that isn't a syncronicity of some sort, then... it isn't.

Post 3666!

Post 2666!


Westpac Bank internet security

Icon from the Tango Desktop project I've trained my old man well with regards to computer security, or at least brainwashed him sufficiently to not take claims of security at face value! From his new blog where he reviews Westpac:

Security is another concern -- Westpac don't use an external number generating dongle and only allow a simple low level 6 digit pin for on-line banking and 4 digit ATM pin -- don't know if that's common but certainly doesn't seem good especially for banking.

No kidding. In 2011 banks don't have an excuse for not providing a third factor authentication system, and enforcing low entropy passwords. He'll be contacting them later this week, I'll be interested to hear what they say.


"Youths not concerned about online privacy"

Channel NewsAsia Singapore: A recent survey [of 800 students aged 18-35] has found that online privacy in social networking sites is not a concern for youths [...]

Of course they're not concerned, they're too busy using Google Chrome and Facebook. </oldmanvoice> This was the part that scared me though:

67.5 per cent have never changed their passwords. Some of the reasons cited were that they were too lazy to do so, and saw no danger in not changing them.


Australia to record browsing history?

Senator Conroy

It's past the stage where we can laugh and call Senator Stephen Conroy a hapless, bumbling boob who espouses Ted Stevens School of Internets ideals, it's time to start acknowledging him as a grave and real threat to the privacy and security of Australians.

After indigently pushing through with plans for his brainchild mandatory internet filter, Senator Conroy now wants internet providers to log their customers internet usage including sites visited and emails sent, in a similar vein to the WiFi hotspot record keeping proposed in Europe. Once again kudos to ZDNet Australia for their excellent coverage of this.

So unabashedly abhorrent

When arguing against the proposed internet filter, I figured even if the ethical and legal questions were legitimate they were superfluous given such a system would simply fail technologically. I joked on Twitter that it was like arguing the ethical and legal qualms with having lead balloons. In this case, allow me to briefly indulge.

I'm not a lawyer and I don't play one on TV or Twitter, but I have to think there are some serious laws being broken here, and at least a few United Nations charter thingys. Whatever happened to those quaint ideas that you're innocent until proven guilty and that you need probable cause and authorisation from a judge before you can start intercepting a private citizen's communiqués?

It seems far fetched, but this is no different from the government deciding they'll start opening and scanning all snail mail, recording phone calls and photographing smoke signals. Some tin foil hat wearers say such things are already happening, but for those of us without the self esteem to be seen in public wearing such things it certainly seems like yet another thing to be genuinely worried about.

Pollute your URL list!

Technological

Okay now that stuff is out of the way, time to move into the area that pays my bills and I like to pretend I know something about.

  1. The plan would almost certainly backfire, as people performing illegal activities would simply use proxy servers and encrypt their traffic. As a consequence, law abiding people would have their privacy violated while the Bad Guys keep doing what they want without fear of having their traffic monitored. It would make covert and authorised gathering of intelligence virtually impossible.

  2. ISPs wouldn't want to record every address people visit because it would be prohibitively expensive and complicated to maintain such a database, and customers wouldn't want it because the expenses would be passed onto them. I'm assuming the government wouldn't foot the bill.

  3. In a fact that perhaps escaped Conroy and his cronies, webpages are often composed of media loaded from multiple sites. This means a single site visit could result in multiple URLs being recorded, some of which could be unintentional -- or worse -- unknown. I can only imagine all the goatse-like sites people will create for Australians to accidently stumble upon that contain frames performing Google searches for child porn or whatever it is Conroy claims is the reason for these North Korean measures.

  4. Conroy's personal crusade against Google looks ridiculously hypocritical given he wants the same alleged powers for himself and the Federal Police.

  5. If this became law, I'd create a website with an address like ScrewYouConroy.com and have all our computers ping it around the clock while performing random Google searches on random combinations of dictionary words from The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Even if such draconian measures were enacted, we could lower their information entropy enough for them to be rendered far less useful.

  6. You think Australia is the laughing stock of the Western world now and the butt of thousands of jokes in China highlighting our government's hypocrisy and arrogance? You ain't seen nothing yet.

The Very Hungry Caterpillar

We're really screwed

I usually vote for The Greens but their preferences go to Labor. The conservative Liberal and National parties have issued nothing other than off the cuff remarks and certainly no thorough repudiations of these draconian policies. It's become cliche to say we'll vote for the lesser of two evils, but what do you do when both parties are evil?

I think on election day this year I'll just quietly sob in the corner of my room with a big tub of ice cream and watch some moeblob anime. That is, if the latter is still available and wouldn't flag me as a suspect.


[Anime] That WOULD be scary!

From a certain well known image board

"Kyon? This is God. You're not thinking about Mikuru again are you!?"


[Anime] Sailor Kyonko, Sailor Rubenko

Don't read this post. Honestly.

Be warned, when I'm feeling depressed and need something to cheer me up I'm bound to do something quite silly. In this case, this morning while waiting for a cup of coffee I played around with the Sailor Moon generator my sister found.

Lesser known scouts who should have stayed that way

Kyonko Rubenko
Untransformed Kyon Ruben M. Schade
Transform music Haruhi & ENOZ Michael Franks
Colours Cardigan brown From Rubenerd.com
Element Tea served by Mikuru Arabica coffee
Special Moves The Cardigan Whip,
The Brow Furrow
The Infinite Loop,
The Ramble
Enemy Frustrating antics Direct sunlight
Weaknesses Transformative gods,
The Mikuru Beam
Eye contact,
Robusta coffee
Fight capable Define with who Define "fight"
Abomination Not the weirdest
incarnation!
Probably,
running away...

Explain yourself

For those who don't know, Kyon is from The Shenanigans of Haruhi Suzumiya, and his fan inspired female Kyonko form has become a cult icon. A Google Image search or looking at any of the image boards will give you an idea of his/her/its pervasiveness, some even going as far as to say his female form is the hottest character that did/didn't exist. Only in anime fandom, sheesh!

As a defence for us being Sailor Scots, in the original series of Sailor Moon The Three Lights were sought after idol men who transformed to superwomen, so is this really a stretch? You know what, don't answer that, owe this whole fiasco to a lack of coffee at that time of day and embarrassment at the fact I was able to so successfully shred what remaining masculinity I had.

Sailor Rubenko!Sailor Kyonko!

Come again?

Wait, I had masculinity? This is news to me. By the way, this is your cue to leave a comment telling me otherwise. This is how things like this work, you see.

Okay I admit it, I didn't make Rubenko, a friend of mine from Singapore did and sent me the screenshot along with several disparaging remarks. I'm just glad she covered me up as much as she could, because as the table demonstrates, sunlight is my enemy. That table and Kyonko were entirely my fault, you can tell because the design is suckier, to use the technical terms. Because the desginer didn't have a cardigan I had to make the gloves cardigan coloured which didn't really work.

I'm going to need a really, really big... cup of coffee.


Conroy responds to critics... online?

No Filter, No Censorship, No Great Firewall of Australia

In an article ripe with brash generalisations and blatant misinformation, Senator Conroy has directly attacked the critics of the proposed mandatory Great Internet Filter of Australia in a posting to The Punch.

The heading of his piece states:

Conroy: Don’t believe the myths on the ISP filter

You mean the myths that it won't be an electronic Edsel and not a Titanic waste of taxpayers money? And what about this gem right in the second paragraph:

The Government has always maintained there is no silver bullet when it comes to cyber safety and we have never said ISP-level filtering alone would help fight child pornography or keep children safe online.

Then, prey tell, what is the point senator?

The irony that someone would defend their moves to push Australia's online civil liberties and free speech towards PRC and North Korean territory by publishing an article online is breathtaking. I have an idea sir, I find you ramblings offensive, can I have them filtered?


Post #2666! Run away!!! I'm super cereal!

This latest Pointless Rubenerd Milestone blog post is so useless it should not be read by anyone. If you're just seeing this summary, leave it and move on. If you're subscribed in a blog reader and you can see the whole post, disregard it.

Now that's out of the way we can get down to bidness. Despite the sluggish performance issues that have been plaguing this site since the wee hours of the morning, I've finally been able to submit this post which, as I've said, is completely pointless but represents a milestone only reached three other times in the history of the site.

Post 2666!

Still haven't got it yet? Even with the friggen enclosed picture? The post is 2666, which has the number 666 in it! Run away! Head for the hills and don't return! If you live in Singapore which has no hills other than these two tiny ones, jump into the ocean or cross over to Malaysia and head for the hills! AAAAAAAAA! Better still if you live in Adelaide, head to Hahndorf in the Hills and have some really awesome German food. :)

I know I've already said this on the WordPress 666 ID post, the 666th post and the 1666th post, but Elfen Lied scared the heck out of me.

And here's where it gets really scary. I hadn't blogged about Firefox extensions for several months, but I did this morning. When was one of the last times I did an in-depth review of a Firefox extension? The same day as post #1666. AAAAAAAAAAAAA!

Update

As I was typing up this post, I was so engrossed I forgot I'd started toasting some bread and it set off the smoke alarm! I was typing up how Elfen Lied scared me and atheist-humanist 666 mock-scared me and THAT happened, at the same friggen time! I jumped so hard out my computer chair I slammed my knees on the underside of the table! OWIES!!!


Sarah Palin's book is... nonfiction?

It's another Audible blog post; one would think I'm a beginning to develop an obsession. In this case though it's their filing of Going Rogue [allegedly] written by Sarah Palin under... Nonfiction. I tell you what, when all is said and done, it's good to see the database maintainers on Audible have a sense of humour... by golly, you betcha!

In related news, I'm terrified both of Sarah Palin and the fact she's being taken seriously by so many people in the US. I'm dead serious. It makes be break out in a cold sweat thinking just how close she became to essentially being vice president of Earth in 2008, and how she's already being tipped for 2012.

You know what, I might listen to the book though, if only to be fair. I wonder if she read Dreams from my Father?


Deleting, starting my Facebook profile again

Sad Facebook

The more I learn about Facebook, the more I've decided I don't want anything to do with them. Privacy is dead online, but actively recruiting third parties to gather further information on you and other such archaic TOS gems creep me out even more than most sites. It seems while Google is at least tacitly going forward with their Data Liberation Front, Facebook is going backwards.

I've decided to look into deleting my profile and starting fresh by re-adding many of my friends again but none of my personal information short of my name (with something appended to it to make it harder to data mine with), and a vague location. I won't be using applications either because of the terrible privacy implications and because I liked using Facebook Lite so much.

Some of my concerns I need to look into first:

  • There's no such thing as a real, permanent Facebook delete, but it's a lot better than nothing.
  • Given their closed nature I suspect not, but I wonder if there's a way to export your friends list, say in an OPML file?
  • Conversely is there any way to back up my Facebook messages short of transcribing them? Might need to write a little Perl script to download the pages themselves and extract them

Will advise on my progress, stay tuned!