Sometimes Santa visits you through the Net

In discussions with @MrBoJensen we’ve concluded that most of the times virtual friends (people who we do not actually know) surprise us with their positive and supportive reactions. Yesterday I was to be surprised twice this way.

Through the Theory of Computing Blog Agreggator, I learned about “Security and Game Theory: Algorithms, Deployed Systems, Lessons Learned“. After seeing the price of the book, I tweeted:

New book on Security, Game Theory and Algorithms http://bit.ly/sBuUY4 | Pretty expensive for me though

At $64.99 the book carries the typical price from academic publishers. Which of course results in making knowledge contained in the book inaccessble, a contradiction to the very publication of a book. Really people someone has to make the Laffer curve for academic books, paper and textbook prices. Maybe you’ll understand. But I digress.

Minutes after I posted my complaint the Net responded. In my INBOX resided a gift of $64.99 to buy the book. A friend, a net friend whom I’ve never met but with who I’ve discussed various issues over the years and a mutual respect has grown between us, decided that I needed a Christmas present. THANK YOU Sakis. I am deeply moved.

Hours later yet another amazing gesture came. This time from a highly accomplished and respected Greek (a role model one would say). Again I stood speechless for a while trying to comprehend what had happened.

This is not the first time virtual friends have helped me out. But these two incidents forced me to publicaly thank them all because virtual friends never stop to amaze me. They make the Net a better place.

11/11/11

The date is not 11/11/11. It is 2011/11/11. Have people forgotten Y2K? Do they really try to find meaning in every number, even if this means devising it? The only dates that matter are (reasonable) deadlines.

In other news, today Lucas Papademos assumes his new post, as Prime Minister of Greece, charged to do the impossible. And he is to do so by using the same bloated, inefficient (even after downsizing) and resisting to change Public Sector machine. So the question arises:

– If he succeeds, what does this tell us about all our previous leaders?

Διαδικτυακό στοίχημα και Ελληνικοί ISP

Από το άρθρο 51 του Ν.4002/2011:

“5. Απαγορεύεται στους παρόχους υπηρεσιών διαδικτύου (ISPs) με καταστατική έδρα ή έδρα πραγματικής διοίκησης ή μόνιμη εγκατάσταση στην Ελλάδα σύμφωνα με τις γενικές διατάξεις του ν. 2238/1994, να επιτρέπουν την πρόσβαση σε παράνομους παρόχους τυχερών παιγνίων μέσω του διαδικτύου, όπως αναφέρονται στον οικείο κατάλογο (black list) που τηρεί η Ε.Ε.Ε.Π.. Στον πάροχο υπηρεσιών διαδικτύου που παραβαίνει την υποχρέωση αυτή επιβάλλεται πρόστιμο που ορίζεται με τον Κανονισμό Διεξαγωγής και Ελέγχου Παιγνίων.”

Δεν έχω λόγια, καθώς στο άρθρο 52 γίνεται καλύτερο:

“10. Από την έναρξη ισχύος του παρόντος νόμου, απαγορεύεται στους παρόχους υπηρεσιών διαδικτύου (ISPs) με καταστατική έδρα ή έδρα πραγματικής διοίκησης ή μόνιμη εγκατάσταση στην Ελλάδα σύμφωνα με τις γενικές διατάξεις του ν. 2238/1994, να επιτρέπουν την πρόσβαση σε παρόχους τυχερών παιγνίων μέσω του διαδικτύου, οι οποίοι δεν έχουν λάβει άδεια σύμφωνα με τις διατάξεις του παρόντος νόμου. Αν παραβιάζεται η διάταξη του προηγουμένου εδαφίου τα πρόσωπα που ορίζονται στην παράγραφο 11 τιμωρούνται με φυλάκιση τουλάχιστον δύο ετών και με χρηματική ποινή από εκατό χιλιάδες (100.000) ευρώ μέχρι πεντακόσιες χιλιάδες (500.000) ευρώ ανά παράβαση.

11. Προκειμένου περί νομικών προσώπων, ως αυτουργοί των αδικημάτων των προηγουμένων παραγράφων θεωρούνται οι διευθύνοντες, εντεταλμένοι και συμπράττοντες σύμβουλοι ή οι πρόεδροι των διοικητικών συμβουλίων ή οι γενικοί διευθυντές και διευθυντές ή εν γένει κάθε εντεταλμένο πρόσωπο είτε άμεσα από το νόμο είτε από ιδιωτική βούληση είτε με δικαστική απόφαση στη διοίκηση ή στη διαχείριση του νομικού προσώπου. Εάν ελλείπουν όλα τα παραπάνω πρόσωπα, ως αυτουργοί θεωρούνται τα μέλη των διοικητικών συμβουλίων των νομικών προσώπων αυτών, εφόσον ασκούν πράγματι προσωρινά ή διαρκώς ένα από τα ως άνω καθήκοντα.”

Όλο το κείμενο του νόμου εδώ. Οι ρυθμίσεις που ενδιαφέρουν είναι από το άρθρο 25 έως το 55.

Directory Listing Denied

Dedicated to those people who insist that http://www.example.com and http://example.com must point to the same thing. Like I’ve said before, they are not the same thing, they are supposed to be equal only in the eyes of the inexperienced, and yes they are one more place for configuration errors (and user confusion) to emerge. Example (valid as of 2011/07/02 12:24):

Directory Listing Denied

This Virtual Directory does not allow contents to be listed.

IPv6 nostalgia

It is World IPv6 Day today and I’m getting nostalgic. This is how the 6BONE looked in its very last day:

My last 6BONE map
My last 6BONE map

The code that was constructing this diagram was running from July 16, 1998 until June 10, 2006. I had just finished reading “Practical Reusable Unix Software” (which is now available for download) and was trying to do something cool using graphviz. Yep, almost the same time as the Internet Mapping Project began.

I believe the World IPv6 Day is as close a date as we can get to a new Internet Flag Day. This time the switch will not happen in a day but gradually and very (very) slowly. Hopefully in 30 years from today, no IPv4 islands will exist.

“If you are not careful you can con yourself into believing that you did the most important part”

“Next month another block is placed atop the previous one. Then comes along an historian who asks, ‘Well, who built the cathedral?’ Peter added some stones here, and Paul added a few more. If you are not careful you can con yourself into believing that you did the most important part. But the reality is that each contribution has to follow onto previous work. Everything is tied to everything else.” –Paul Baran

[NYT Obit: Paul Baran, Internet Pioneer, Dies at 84]

“Mr. Watson – Come here – I want to see you.”

“The telephone, Bell’s most ambitious gadget yet, reached this stage on March 10, 1876. On that great day, Alexander Graham Bell became the first person to transmit intelligible human speech electrically. As it happened, young Professor Bell, industriously tinkering in his Boston lab, had spattered his trousers with acid. His assistant, Mr. Watson, heard his cry for help—over Bell’s experimental audio-telegraph. This was an event without precedent.”

[via: The Hacker Crackdown]

Blast from the past: Bruce Sterling on Cyberspace

With everybody and his dog prepending cyber- to almost everywhere, declaring the cyberspace as a new war dimension (the first four being earth, sea, air and space) abusing and overusing terms like cyberwar, cyberdefense, cyber-infrastructure it is a good idea to return to the basics, like the very definition of the cyberspace. Luckily in his 1992 “Hacker Crackdown” introduction, Bruce Sterling came to assist us, long before a definition for the wider public was needed:

A science fiction writer coined the useful term “cyberspace” in 1982, but the territory in question, the electronic frontier, is about a hundred and thirty years old. Cyberspace is the “place” where a telephone conversation appears to occur. Not inside your actual phone, the plastic device on your desk. Not inside the other person’s phone, in some other city. THE PLACE BETWEEN the phones. The indefinite place OUT THERE, where the two of you, two human beings, actually meet and communicate.

Although it is not exactly “real,” “cyberspace” is a genuine place. Things happen there that have very genuine consequences. This “place” is not “real,” but it is serious, it is earnest. Tens of thousands of people have dedicated their lives to it, to the public service of public communication by wire and electronics.

Even if you have no interest in reading about Operation Sundevil, the introduction of the book is a very informative essay on cyberspace that stands on its own.

Read Next: Proposal for cyber war rules of engagement.