wizardbattle
PrinceGumball
wizardbattle

To be fair to USU, it's not like they could choose to ban guns from the event. There was no decision to make. They used to have a gun ban, but it was ruled unconstitutional by their supreme court. They can't ban guns on public property apparently. Blame their ass backwards legislature, and those of other states

Yeah, we need to raise 87 million cows in the US because people really need to eat a steak every fucking day. That's a horrible argument.

This law has nothing to do with consent. It is illegal because we, as a society, think that people fucking animals are gross deviants. They are not trying to protect the animals. Animals don't consent for us to kill and eat them, but we do it all the time and no one would pass a law against it.

I can understand that, I guess, but they weren't enslaved or massacred like the indigenous people in North and South America. To my recollection, they actually descend from Tahitians that conquered and enslaved the original inhabitants of Hawaii, so there's that...

What bothered me about the reaction in Spain was that people clearly cared more about that stupid dog than they did the thousands of african PEOPLE who have been infected. Where's the outpouring of sympathy for them?

That's why nostalgia is a trap and conservatism is appealing only to the oppressing class. The past was always shittier than the present for some group of people. There's only one direction to go and it's not back.

In a lot of schools (at least where I am) they use it as an opportunity to teach about the horrible atrocities committed by the Spanish conquistadors. But what does Columbus have to do with Hawaii?

Gamergate is stupid and I don't sympathize with them at all. Having said that, there are comments on this very article saying, "you should kill yourself" and "if I had time I would beat some sense into all of them". People get worked up and threaten violent shit all the time. On every side.

I would say defaced, but not hacked. Although, in the popular media, doing anything with computers that bad or that the reporter doesn't understand is "hacking" :-\

Yeah, that's why I said pretty much exactly that. You can't force someone to do something they don't want to. That's a hard line, you don't have control over another person's body or actions. But you can decide that you need a partner that does that thing and if your current partner won't then you can leave.

Absolutely. Of course everyone can decide for themselves what their boundaries are and no one should be forced to do something they don't want to do. On the flip side, if your partner won't do something that you really feel like you need, then you have every right to dump them. If that thing is pretty simple, and

He's 24 apparently.

I agree that kids shouldn't be prosecuted for child porn if they are both minors, but it does get real creepy if you keep the pictures when you are older. Like, the subjects are also not minors any more, but... you're looking at them when they were? Very creepy.

This is such a bizarre comment. Why do you think that I found that story somewhere? It absolutely happened to me.

What are you talking about?

Better keep the mask on though.

It doesn't rely on passing any input from the user to bash, per se. The CGI standard says that all the HTTP request headers should be put into environment variables before scripts are called. That is not Apache's fault, it is doing what it is supposed to do. The vulnerability is not in the scripts, all they have to

Maybe for your specific deployment scenario, but for a lot of situations it is a very real vulnerability. The DHCP vector is particularly insidious. It's been a while since we had a vulnerability that could let someone own your machine just for connecting to an untrusted wireless network.

What's different about Shellshock though is that it is a very deep vulnerability in a tool which is used by lots of other pieces of software. That makes the attack surface ridiculously huge since you have to look at everything that uses bash or makes a system() call. Most vulnerabilities (including Heartbleed) are

I just thought it was an informative comment, and that some people on GT might also find it interesting. It got 12 stars in the like 10 minutes that it was up, so I think I was right.