Other commenters on this very article, people who actually watched the movie, disagree with you.
Other commenters on this very article, people who actually watched the movie, disagree with you.
Ghost in the Shell. Multiple articles and a roundtable featuring every writer at io9. Huuuuuuge problem. Iron Fist. Too many articles to count. Huuuuuge problem.
io9 begins and ends with the color of the skin. Nothing else matters to the writers here. Intent, nuance, doesn’t matter.
Nah I think the most furious people are Asian Americans and other American PoC.
Washing machines periodically cycle in clean water. There’s agitation, the spin cycle - you can’t compare all the activity in a washing machine to a person just sitting in a small, static pool of water.
But even when I lived in a suburb and drove everywhere, I still cleaned my entire body when I got in the bath.
Agreed. Joel seemed to be laughing with the movies, Mike seemed to be laughing at them - if that makes sense. And I know, Mike was the head writer while Joel was host, but there definitely was a shift in tone as the seasons progressed, and a marked difference after Joel left.
No, they can’t. At all. The manager’s database is encrypted. Even if someone did get their hands on one of my old drives (even if I didn’t also smash mine before disposing of them), they wouldn’t be able to access the passwords in the database.
This wins all the discussion threads. Conversation over.
Or just use a password manager because you’re overthinking this. Security professionals recommend the use of a password manager. I don’t know why you you’re so steadfast in your refusal to the point where you’re willing to create so much extra work - and introduce that much more risk - by having them in physical…
How does that solve anything? If you keep the list on your computer, the computer is hackable, and you lose. If you type out the list, print it, and delete the list, then you have to re-type it every time a password changes. So, okay, you have your hand the ache of writing out each one, but still.
Fair point, says this user of AdGuard ;)
I largely agree, up until this:
I did that for years and years, using a base password that was given to me when I was working at NASA back in 2001. Problem is, it’s not long enough anymore. Your example of “123@gizwe” actually isn’t that hard to crack. It’s too short. So was mine.
I currently have more than 900 logins listed in 1Password between me and my wife. They are all unique, they are all quite long and complex. These passwords get updated from time to time.
Most likely, the safest thing one could do is to stop using LastPass until it’s fixed
People here have a really bad habit of throwing people out the goddamn airlock as soon as they screw up (or they’re perceived to screw up) just once. See also: Joss Whedon, Age of Ultron. Entire careers just swept under the rug because they don’t like - often because they don’t understand - one scene.
Eric Null, the policy counsel at the Open Technology Institute
Who is your secret fast food love?