Singapore Government Hackers Love to Hack Teo En Ming's Computers, Smartphones, and Internet Online Accounts

Gerhard Magnus magnusg3000 at gmail.com
Sun Aug 9 00:29:54 UTC 2015


On 08/08/2015 04:42 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
>
> 2015/08/09 0:58 "Jonesy" <SPAM_TRAP_gmane at jonz.net
> <mailto:SPAM_TRAP_gmane at jonz.net>>:
>  >
>  > On Sat, 8 Aug 2015 09:44:15 -0600, compdoc wrote:
>  > >>would...hackers be able to hack into my home desktop computer again?
>  > >
>  > > ...
>  > > 4) If you have drawn the attention of your government, you might
> want to
>  > > rethink your life.
>
> Mostly, rethink why you care, and why you should care. And how you care.
>
> Maybe change some of the things you do. If you care in that way.
>
>  > Or, rethink your domicile.
>
> Where do you suggest this guy should live?
>
> Software does change a little when you cross borders, and so do the
> opponents in the game. But the opponents and the vulnerabilities don't
> go away, they only change.
>
> Sometimes change can be helpful, sometimes not.
>
> So, where do you suggest this guy should move?
>
> Joel Rees
>
> Computer memory is just fancy paper,
> CPUs just fancy pens.
> All is a stream of text
> flowing from the past into the future.
>
>
The great thing about giving advice is that it costs the person giving 
the advice nothing and makes them feel good, while the person receiving 
the advice has to take all the risks and do all the work. I've always 
thought that people should have to pay to give advice rather than to 
receive it.





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