Jump to content

arnel_gumaru

[05] MEMBER III
  • Posts

    255
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by arnel_gumaru

  1. Problema sa globalport talong talo tayo sa backcourt nila...alang makakabantay kina pringle and romeo sama mo na din si cabagnot(may history sya with ginebra sa mga game winning shots nya)... Only yeo is capable na makipagsabayan with only ONE of them...nakasalalay panalo ng ginebra sa froncourt nila....

     

    kaya kayang bantayan ni forrester yung isa dun sa mga yun? then yeo dun sa isa? time to let loose of the young guys. si monfort ma-hassle din maglaro.

  2. Congrats Gilas! Sana hindi natin kailanganing maghintay ulit ng 40 years para makakuha ng susunod na panalo natin.

     

    Congrats na rin to MVP and cohorts.

     

    I heard MVP wants to bid for the 2019 FIBA World Cup. I'm sure a lot of poeple will be going to support this.

     

    Nakita na natin nagagawa ng #PUSO. Next time naman try natin dagdagan pa ng #UTAK saka #SHOOT. Try to add Cone to the coaching Staff. Ngayon pa lang paghandaan na ang susunod na mga laban. I'd like to see us destroy the five positions in basketball - every man should be a rifleman, able to shoot at any spot on the court whether big man or small man. At hanap pa ng isa o dalawa pang 7-footer talent. Sa isandaang milyong Pilipino, siguro naman meron dyang ilang statistical anomaly sa height.

     

    Congrats ulit!

  3. Meron pa palang isang player ang Ginebra na ang tangkad..........I saw his jersey, FAUNDO name niya. Looks like a rookie. Parang malapit na kay Japeth sa tangkad. Saan siya galing?

     

    Brian Faundo. Galing Globalport but started with Barako in 2009. Nakuha sya via trade for Eric Menk.

  4. this may not be the first time that the US has compromised the hardware of other nations. remember Gulf War 1, US-made photocopiers used by Iraq's military contained homing beacons used by the US Air Force making their smart bombs more accurate.

     

     

    http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2013/12/nsa-cisco-huawei-china/?mbid=synd_yfinance

     

     

     

     

    U.S. to China: We Hacked Your Internet Gear We Told You Not to Hack

     

    The headline news is that the NSA has surreptitiously “burrowed its way into nearly all the security architecture” sold by the world’s largest computer networking companies, including everyone from U.S. mainstays Cisco and Juniper to Chinese giant Huawei. But beneath this bombshell of a story from Der Spiegel, you’ll find a rather healthy bit of irony.

     

    After all, the United States government has spent years complaining that Chinese intelligence operations could find ways of poking holes in Huawei networking gear, urging both American businesses and foreign allies to sidestep the company’s hardware. The complaints grew so loud that, at one point, Huawei indicated it may abandon the U.S. networking market all together. And, yet, Der Speigel now tells us that U.S. intelligence operations have been poking holes in Huawei networking gear — not to mention hardware sold by countless other vendors in both the States and abroad.

     

    “We read the media reports, and we’ve noted the references to Huawei and our peers,” says William Plummer, a Huawei vice president and the company’s point person in Washington, D.C. “As we have said, over and over again — and as now seems to be validated — threats to networks and data integrity can come from any and many sources.”

     

    Plummer and Huawei have long complained that when the U.S. House Intelligence Committee released a report in October 2012 condemning the use of Huawei gear in telephone and data networks, it failed to provide any evidence that the Chinese government had compromised the company’s hardware. Adam Segal, a senior fellow for China Studies at the Center for Foreign Relations, makes the same point. And now we have evidence — Der Spiegel cites leaked NSA documents — that the U.S. government has compromised gear on a massive scale.

     

    “Do I see the irony? Certainly the Chinese will,” Segal says, noting that the Chinese government and the Chinese press have complained of U.S hypocrisy ever since former government contractor Edward Snowden first started to reveal NSA surveillance practices last summer. “The Chinese government has been hammering home what they call the U.S.’s ulterior motives for criticizing China, and there’s been a steady drumbeat of stories in the Chinese press about backdoors in the products of U.S. companies. They’ve been going after Cisco in particular.”

     

    To be sure, the exploits discussed by Der Spiegel are a little different from the sort of attacks Congress envisioned during its long campaign against Huawei and ZTE, another Chinese manufacturer. As Segal and others note, Congress mostly complained that the Chinese government could collaborate with people inside the two companies to plant backdoors in their gear, with lawmakers pointing out that Huawei’s CEO was once an officer in China’s People’s Liberation Army, or PLA, the military arm of the country’s Communist party. Der Spiegel, by contrast, says the NSA is exploiting hardware without help from anyone inside the Ciscos and the Huaweis, focusing instead on compromising network gear with clever hacks or intercepting the hardware as it’s shipped to customers.

     

    “For the most part, the article discusses typical malware exploits used by hackers everywhere,” says JR Rivers, an engineer who has built networking hardware for Cisco as well as Google and now runs the networking startup Cumulus Networks. “It’s just pointing out that the NSA is engaged in the practice and has resources that are not available to most people.”

     

    But in the end, the two types of attack have the same result: Networking gear controlled by government spies. And over the last six months, Snowden’s revelations have indicated that the NSA is not only hacking into networks but also collaborating with large American companies in its hunt for data.

     

    Jim Lewis, a director and senior fellow with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, adds that the Chinese view state-sponsored espionage a little differently than the U.S. does. Both countries believe in espionage for national security purposes, but the Chinese argue that such spying might include the theft of commercial secrets.

     

    “The Chinese will tell you that stealing technology and business secrets is a way of building their economy, and that this is important for national security,” says Lewis, who has helped oversee meetings between the U.S. and the Chinese, including officers in the PLA. “I’ve been in the room when they’ve said that. The last time was when a PLA colonel said: ‘In the U.S., military espionage is heroic and economic espionage is a crime. In China, the line is not that clear.’”

     

    But here in the United States, we now know, the NSA may blur other lines in the name of national security. Segal says that although he, as an American, believes the U.S. government is on stronger ethical ground than the Chinese, other nations are beginning to question its motives.

     

    “The U.S has to convince other countries that our type of intelligence gathering is different,” he says. “I don’t think that the Brazils and the Indias and the Indonesias and the South Africas are convinced. That’s a big problem for us.”

     

    The thing to realize, as the revelations of NSA snooping continue to pour out, is that everyone deserves scrutiny — the U.S government and its allies, as well as the Chinese and others you may be more likely to view with skepticism. “All big countries,” Lewis says, “are going to try and do this.”

  5. Sayang talaga si Intal and Tubid

     

     

    I don't think they'd be gone too long. Baka after a conference or two eh balik na naman sa gins ang isa o yang dalawang yan - like what they did to Billy Mamaril na na-trade a Air21 pero nakabalik din.

  6. 1 : Life is not fair - get used to it!

     

    2 : The world won't care about your self-esteem. The world will expect you to accomplish something BEFORE you feel good about yourself.

     

    3 : You will NOT make $60,000 a year right out of high school. You won't be a vice-president with a car phone until you earn both.

     

    4 : If you think your teacher is tough, wait till you get a boss.

     

    5 : Flipping burgers is not beneath your dignity. Your Grandparents had a different word for burger flipping: they called it opportunity. (wag masyado mapili sa trabaho)

     

    6: If you mess up, it's not your parents' fault, so don't whine about your mistakes, learn from them.

     

    7: Before you were born, your parents weren't as boring as they are now. They got that way from paying your bills, cleaning your clothes and listening to you talk about how cool you thought you were. So before you save the rain forest from the parasites of your parent's generation, try delousing the closet in your own room.

     

    8: Your school may have done away with winners and losers, but life HAS NOT. In some schools, they have abolished failing grades and they'll give you as MANY TIMES as you want to get the right answer. This doesn't bear the slightest resemblance to ANYTHING in real life.

     

    9: Life is not divided into semesters. You don't get summers off and very few employers are interested in helping you FIND YOURSELF. Do that on your own time.

     

    10: Television is NOT real life. In real life people actually have to leave the coffee shop and go to jobs.

     

    11: Be nice to nerds. Chances are you'll end up working for one. If you agree, pass it on. If you can read this - Thank a teacher!

×
×
  • Create New...