[00:19] Apparently, Windows has a problem with environmental variables allowing execution as well: http://thesecurityfactory.be/command-injection-windows.html [00:35] ha [00:43] SketchCow: i'm going to be upload twit episodes from 2010 [00:44] just know there are 2009 episodes that i uploaded to community videos [00:45] also episodes NSFW_161 and NSFW_162 was uploaded by someone else so they have to be moved to the NSFW collection [01:01] Someone may want to let the IA know that they have been added to a blacklist somewhere. My ISP sent me an email about going to a website that serves malware. When I tried to email them, I got an email stating it was blocked as it was to a known spammer. [01:02] On second reading, it mentioned something called SORBS. [01:05] SORBS is an email black list [01:08] I'm not seeing them on any email black lists [01:08] http://mxtoolbox.com/SuperTool.aspx?action=blacklist%3aarchive.org&run=toolpage# [01:13] https://www.virustotal.com/en/url/dfc0f5c1e1a6bf0152d65d16eead74361cf8f299f3b00616044e81f4004965f7/analysis/ shows two warnings [01:14] maybe my ISP is just behind on the delisting due to caching the list or something. [01:15] aaaaaaaaa: IA ends up on spam/malware lists sometimes [01:16] had them removed from a list a few weeks ago [01:16] why? [01:16] (you can generally just email them and go "hey, this is the internet archive, probably shouldn't be on a list") [01:16] aaaaaaaaa: because sometimes people upload malware to IA [01:16] lol [01:17] yeah, obvious answer. I guess I just expected the list people to know about them, especially if this has happened before. [01:23] aaaaaaaaa: these lists are typically automatically compiled, using honeypots etc [04:51] so in the last day i have uploaded over 2k items [07:28] damn godane. damn. [07:28] That's plenty many [07:42] ersi: thats cause of the ERIC archives collection will have over 40k pdfs [16:48] .tw https://twitter.com/joepie91/status/521703527480311810 [16:48] "Asset seizures fuel police spending" http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/investigative/2014/10/11/cash-seizures-fuel-police-spending/ Seizures? There's a much more appropriate word for this practice: Theft. (@joepie91) [16:51] You should read some of the case names in asset forfeiture proceedings. Some are quite humorous. [16:52] a good one is United States v. Article Consisting of 50,000 Cardboard Boxes More or Less, Each Containing One Pair of Clacker Balls. [16:52] they redeem the whole practice [16:54] Here are some of the more famous ones: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:United_States_civil_forfeiture_case_law [16:54] aaaaaaaaa: hahaha what [16:54] Of course, there is also the ones where they take people's homes. [16:55] wat [16:57] aaaaaaaaa: wat? [16:58] http://www.forbes.com/sites/instituteforjustice/2014/08/26/philadelphia-civil-forfeiture-class-action-lawsuit/ [16:58] that is just one example of when forfeiture turns evil. [16:59] so i got another 2TB hard driv [16:59] *drive [17:01] aaaaaaaaa: *turns* evil? [17:01] I'm having a hard time finding a way in which it wasn't evil to begin with [17:01] i just noticed byte magazine collection really doesn't have much past 1987 [17:10] What about huge drug busts or illegal weaponry or cases of fraud? [17:11] At a minimum, I would support disgorgement [17:11] aaaaaaaaa: aside from the entire concept of forfeiture in the US (apparently) not requiring conviction and thus being extra evil regardless of the alleged (or non-alleged?) crime being committed [17:11] I fail to see how seizure of assets in those cases is desirable for anybody other than the entity profiting off it [17:12] the common argument is "well, it deters criminals" [17:12] but that one gets a very big [citation needed] stamp from me [17:12] especially because that argument does not /at all/ align with how markets work [17:12] (which is to say that such seizures are just considered a risk of business, and thus just become a part of the price that the end user pays for the products or services being sold, not harming the people perpetrating the "crime", but the customers) [17:14] and on top of all that, the question "are drug busts even a good thing?" [17:14] which I'd tend to answer with "no" [17:23] godane: do you scan magazines that people mail to you? [17:24] have a pile of old dr. dobbs journals [17:28] i have not scanned in close to a year [17:28] ahhh, ok [17:31] joepie91: we should use civil asset forfeiture against companies that are about to delete data [17:32] "sorry, that data might have involved a crime, hand it over" [17:33] US v. 2,000 hard drives of various sizes approximating 350 TB of data [17:49] hahaha [23:06] http://www.thesimm.org/temp/ff_x_redux.jpg