Blog Archives

HBGary.* part II

More information, or at least a more coherent complete set of information, is available as of this morning from Ars Technica. They have done a really good job of putting the pieces into a clear picture. What I heard in

Posted in Digital Forensics, Hacks, Cracks, and Attacks, Law, News & Commentary, Security

The Sad Saga of HBGary

Yesterday I took a trip to UNO to listen to a presentation from one of our bioinformatics professors on immunology. We’re working on some research proposals to develop network defense techniques based on biological immunity systems – why reinvent the

Posted in Digital Forensics, Hacks, Cracks, and Attacks, News & Commentary, Security

Computers vs Human – Competitors or Complementary?

I think at some point in a computer scientist’s studies the computers themselves become less of a thing, a tool, and instead become more of an extension of the self like an arm or a hand. I’ve always felt the

Posted in Computer Science, News & Commentary

P2P lawsuits examined with graph theory

P2P infringement cases are fascinating for several reasons. They are the essence of my argument the intersection of law and technology is going to be a significant one in the future once courts become more widely cognizant of the difference

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Posted in Computer Science, Law, News & Commentary

ACTA Treaty

If pressed, I would name the ACTA treaty and Network Neutrality as the two most threatening issues of the day with regard to the Internet. The ACTA treaty has, until recently, been under super secret negotiations hidden from public scrutiny.

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Posted in Law, News & Commentary