nelson-laquet-old
Nelson LaQuet
nelson-laquet-old

I've been pretty peeved at the recent media attention that CIQ is getting - painting it as some sort of malicious spyware. It would be dead easy to decompile (seriously - it's Java) and/or packet sniff that application, to the point where the fact that there isn't any proof that they're storing or sending data is very

I just want to point out... 15 year old "developers" these days is a fairly common phenomenon. With the amount of free information, and most importantly, free help, available on the Internet, it doesn't take much for a person to create an application. Add that to the ridiculously consumer friendly development tools,

"Business savvy" people don't act like this.

It can't get any worse then BETA 1... I can barely use my iPad at the moment.

It's not hacking... It's DDoSing. That takes close to 0 skill, and is hardly a commendable feat. If you want to join in on this, simply get infected with one of the botnets that they are using to send out the attack.

And we are one step closer to the Ansible and zero-ping communication. Go Science! Though on that note, the bandwith of 6 photons is probably abysmal.

No. That's the point of hashing. If someone uploads a file with even a single bit that is incorrect, the hash will be different (and thus the two files won't be matched).

The title of this article is misleading. Dropbox does still encrypt your files, it just maintains the encryption keys on their servers rather than storing them on the client machines. This is the practice of virtually every company that stores encrypted data of their users in their datacenters; in fact, there are very

Wait... People still rar things? Seriously?