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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: JeaoneKef le Décembre 23, 2024, 06:15:14 am

Titre: fwtq Stop Moaning About How You Don t Own a New iPad, and Win One by Taking the
Posté par: JeaoneKef le Décembre 23, 2024, 06:15:14 am
Aoyq 15 Years of Cutting-Edge Thinking on Understanding the Mind
 What happens when a social experiment gets socially experimented on      Jonathan Stark  no relation to Ironman  started a social experiment  which is not a PR stunt  wherein he put his Starbucks Coffee card up for grabs. He started it off with $100, and anyone can use it, and anyone can add money to it. The idea was an experiment in so stanley flasche (https://www.cups-stanley.de) cial sharing of physical goods using digital currency, and the whole pay it forward concept. It was working rather well. Then some dude named Sam Odio decided to derai stanley tumblers (https://www.stanley-cup.it) l it. Kind of. https://gizmodo/is-jonathan-s-starbucks-card-a-slick-marketing-campaign-5829407 Sam didn ;t find the idea of yuppies buying yuppies coffees very interesting. So he came up with a hack to siphon money off of Jonathan   coffee card and onto his own. At the time of his blog post, he had netted $625 of Starbucks credit, which he intends to sell on eBay. Rather than simply embezzle the money, though, he   going to sell the coffee cards on eBay and give the money to Save the Children  or so he says . While it   hard to argue with yuppies buying yuppies coffee not being very interesting, and of course, we would love to see Save the Children get all the money in the world, this still feels like a dick move. It wasn ;t his project to mess with. Besides, it   not a project about people buying each other coffee, it  stanley cup (https://www.stanleycups.at) 8217  about looking at human nature. If want your own art project / social experiment, Mkbi From   8220;Irritable Heart  8221; to   8220;Shellshock  8221;: How Post-Traumatic Stress Became a Disease
 We ;ve all generally come to accept the fact that, in using iMessage, our correspondence runs the very real risk of being eternally damned to the iCloud ether. But at least now, we kn stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.pl) ow we ;re not suffering alone; a document obtained by CNET has revealed that the DEA has also been whining about their inability to access iMessages鈥攂ut their problem is encryption.     The intelligence note, titled Apple   iMessages: A Challenge For DEA Intercept, warns that it   impossible to intercept iMessages between two Apple devices, even with a warrant, because of its secure end-to-end encryption. The DEA is only thwarted, however, when the messages are encrypted by Apple, so normal SMS text messaging is still fair game. They first discovered their little iMessage problem while attempting to perform electronic surveillance back in Octobe stanley kubek (https://www.stanley-cups.pl) r 2011, and it  822 stanley cup quencher (https://www.stanley-quencher.uk) 0;became apparent that not all text messages were being captured. It turned out, of course, that their target was an iMessage enthusiast. Apple asserts that the service was in no way designed to be government-proof. But Christopher Soghoian, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union, admits that the government would need to perform an active man-in-the-middle attack. So the next time you start bemoaning the plague that is Apple   slow, glitchy, and wildly popular messaging service, you can at least be thankful that it   an equal opport