Archive for December, 2008

Three Ways of Anonymous Surfing

Friday, December 12th, 2008
boss jokes
Joseph Boyd asked:


As a result of recent events in Europe I began to think about anonymity on the web and while using its services. I started to meditate how to change IP address nowadays and what is the best way to hide IP address to be anonymous on the Net.

In Germany they’re considering a law that can be passed in the nearest future. Among others it states that from now Internet providers MUST give away their clients data to the investigating agencies.

E.g. in the case the law is passed in 2008 all the information about Internet surfing, searches and crossings and even whole google.de users’ correspondence will be among the data shown to the authorities by the Dutch department of Google.

Perhaps Europe will follow German and your and my security along with anonymity will be doubtful. On the one hand I agree that cheaters, thieves and other criminals are to be punished, but not to put person’s privacy undecided. How to talk to your lover? How to evade your boss? How to write letters via email and messengers if you know somebody’s reading them?

I might be exaggerating but we have different interests and everyone uses the Internet on his own and each of us has what to hide from other people/colleagues/friends/wives/husbands/bosses etc.

Can it be we can do nothing but become the users of the ‘closed’ Internet like in CPR? For the past years China has been leading in the list of the nations practicing wide political Internet censorship. Cyber police team tracks and blocks resources disagreeable for the authorities within the framework of special government program – Great Firewall of China. And last week companies Yahoo China, MSN China and some others signed the Code assigned for their blog services which would oblige the companies ‘to protect CPR and public interests’ and to remove ‘unordered and immoral messages’ from online journals.

Tell me what you think about this and your opinion regarding the fact you will be watched.

Is it forbidden to visit the sites not concerned with your work while you are in the office? Is it ok to talk messengers?

So let’s put everything to its place – what ways to stay anonymous on the net are available for us (we won’t consider different variants using vpn/ssh tunnels, let’s take account of mass usage thus the variants with exhausting tuning are thrown away) I suggest just 3 ways how to change IP address:

1. Software using proxy servers. I mean all traffic is passed through a proxy.

2. Software using ssh tunnel. It is a socks server to the remote server with an encoded channel. It can be used for http/mail/icq.

3. Software with encoded tunnel client server with tcp/udp packages transmission. Based on this any program -http/mail/messenger/p2p/games/dns/etc – can run.

1. This software is often called hide ip/change ip/anonymous surfing. I will show you how it works.

Surfing through the proxy server is anonymous for the remote server only.

E.g. go at google.com and it will see ip of our proxy server. On the one hand the program is performing its function – changing ip. But on the other – your admin/provider/boss can review all enquiries made with the help of software and the pages you visit. Moreover we cannot send a letter or write a massage anonymously as we know we are under Big Brother supervision. It appears from this such programs are suitable in the case you want to play a joke on your friends or you’ve been banned at a forum. This software doesn’t match anonymity.

2. I haven’t seen much simple and understandable services using ssh tunnel. This method enlarges the range of the program which can change ip address and even encodes all sent and received data.

For example, if you enter myspace.com or digg.com using ssh tunnel your boss/admin/provider won’t be able to see this and read your messages. But there is a hitch – using ssh tunnel DNS enquiries are sent without being encoded ‘cause it doesn’t support udp protocol. Anonymity will be under the risk as domain you enter or domain you send email to are invisible. None would guess what you were doing at the site but they would know you were there. This software doesn’t match anonymity too.

3. I have found this one lately, running vpn, paying for the separate server, its tuning and administration. And now I only press “Make me invisible” and all questions drop away.

Benefits of such software are prevalent from the others. Application running through the tunnel, tcp/udp support. Any p2p, games WOW3, icq application support. No need to customize browsers and programs – one button click and that’s it. The only shortcoming is its speed. No matter what channel you have, your speed is decreased, but I ran a free version of it and I can’t say for sure, maybe paid services don’t have this limitation.

I checked all software I use and all of them run through the tunnel. If you wonder what soft it is, I will answer – http://www.smarthide.com I’ve got three invites for a free edition so contact me if you want one. =)



Joan

I Hate My Job and My Boss

Friday, December 12th, 2008
boss jokes
104inc.com asked:


I here the same complaint over and over again; my manager sucks, I hate my boss, if I was in charge I would be a better boss, the owner of the company never listens to my ideas. I have one thing to say to those people. STOP COMPLAINING!!!

The reason you are in a dead end no where job is because you are not the smartest or the most efficient or the hardest working. Most of you who complain about this are probably reading this from your desk at work instead of being productive. The successful people do not work for anyone but themselves. They create something new to bring to the marketplace. They are the ones who create opportunities so a lazy dumb ass like you can even have a job.

I want you to conduct an honest evaluation about yourself and your work ethic and ask your self the following questions:

1. How much time do you spend speaking with co-workers about things other then work?

2. How much time in a day do you send on email talking with friends or forwarding jokes rather then doing your job?

3. When was the last time you presented a feasible idea to the company which can help the company to increase sales, profitability, and efficiency?

4. How often do you have to be told what to do in your job rather then you taking the lead to do your job?

5. How often do you send your work up to management without checking the quality of your work?

If you are truly working at least 40 hours per week and the answer to number 1-2 is 0 think about what the owner of the company is doing? That owner is probably working 2-3 time more then you because they want to make sure that the company stays afloat so that you and all the people just like you will still have a job tomorrow.

The reason that you are not moving up is because you have done nothing when it comes to points 3-5. You need to remember something. Most smart and successful entrepreneurs and managers already know what they want and how they want it and it is most likely they will not take your advice or suggestions. So next time they tell you to do something do not say it cannot be done. Try to figure out how to get it done. Do not ask question just do it. As long as you get the end result and it is legitimate and ethical do it. That will show the manager that you are worthy of more and worthy of success.

If you still hate what you are doing, go to 104jobz.com. Find a staffing company that can place you with a firm that you can work with.



Dennis

Alternatives to Remembering Details

Friday, December 5th, 2008
boss jokes
Mike Scantlebury asked:


n we have a very distinguished comedy writing partnership called Galton and Simpson. These two were responsible for some of the funniest situation comedies on radio and television from the 1950s to the 1980s. If you ask anyone living in these islands - who is old enough - they will tell you happily that they remember ‘Steptoe and Son’ and ‘Hancock’s Half Hour’. Most people, of that age, will even be able to quote a few lines from one of the episodes. Ask them about Tony Hancock, the blood donor, and they will say, Oh yes, I remember, he said: ‘A pint? That’s nearly an armful, isn’t it?’ They will be able to describe the episode he got stuck in a lift or the time he had a reunion of old Army pals. Yes, they will say, chuckling merrily, it was all good stuff, I remember it well. Then, ask them this question: What did Hancock do for a living?

It might seem irrelevant. After all, it was a comedy show. It wasn’t meant to be realistic, or even approximate to life. Besides, everyone in Britain knew the name Tony Hancock. He was a comedian, right? Well, actually, no. When the writers were interviewed some years ago, they were asked that very question: why had Hancock never actually been described as a comic in any of the episodes? The stories always involved him living in some sort of run-down suburb of London, sometimes called East Cheam; in an unkempt house, sometimes in a road called ‘Railway Cuttings’; sometimes alone and sometimes with an assortment of friends that included Sid James, Hattie Jacques and Kenneth Williams, all fine comic actors. In the later series, the pals were axed, one by one, and Hancock did all the comedy on his own. (It was also one of the things he was famous for: the more famous he got, the more paranoid and solitary he became.) But what did he do? The writers smiled and said that was one of the fun things they did: they varied it from episode to episode. Most of the time he was described as an actor, but in some of the stories he was incredibly poor, unknown and struggling, while in others, he was famous, a household name, recognised in the street and being given awards for his art. The writers were easily bored, they said, so they had fun with the character, and made him different from week to week. The strange thing, they said, was that no one seemed to notice.

Now we could be generous and say that ‘Of course people noticed’. They saw the variety, saw the joke, and laughed along. Unfortunately, that would be extremely uncommon. Think of a more recent comedy series, like ‘Friends’. One of the characters, Joey, was supposed to be an actor. For much of the earlier series, he was a struggling actor, with the occasional bout of small parts. Later, he achieved a regular gig as ‘Dr Drake Ramore’ in a TV soap opera. But it didn’t change week by week! Over the course of a series, the character Chandler lost his job, was unemployed for a while and then took up an internship in advertising. Remember that? The character Monica was a chef and was in charge of a restaurant for a while. But not just for one week! The fact is that it is very, very strange to have a comedy series in which the main character changes his life as often as Hancock, while still retaining the same persona. One week he was an actor on a West Country farming radio soap opera called ‘The Bowmans’. Anyone remember that? It was for one week, and was never mentioned again. How odd is that? It would be as though Homer Simpson was married to Marge one week, and a single bachelor the next. We know that Homer takes time off to be an astronaut, a singer in a Barbershop quartet, and a human cannonball, but we also know that he has a regular job in the power plant. What if the plant had a different boss every week? Would anyone notice that?

The plain fact is that we like to comfort ourselves with the illusion that we have memories and that they all make sense. What we fail to include is the fact that anything we remember is a mere fraction of the whole, and that usually we choose the bit that gives us most pleasure. So, we remember the odd joke - maybe we can even quote a few lines from the odd Monty Python sketch - but we can’t remember how many lumberjacks there were. Maybe it’s because it doesn’t seem important at the time, so doesn’t get included in the mix. But then it would be like those old wedding photos we sometimes get out and ponder over. Always there’s a question, like, ‘Who is that guy, third on the left, next to Auntie Margaret?’ We can’t remember his name, or if he’s even a relative. There’s a gap in our memory, but, in order to preserve our sense of worth and not to go totally crazy, we simply gloss over that bit and pretend it isn’t there. After all, it’s only a detail, right?

One of the most glaring examples of this selective memory is to do with music. Many pop pundits derive endless pleasure from allowing people to wax lyrical about their favourite tunes, and then prompting them with questions like: ‘When that record, your most preciously remembered song, was in the Top Ten, what was Number One?’ They then embarrass you by quoting some dross that has come and gone, and has not only slipped from your memory, but also from the collective consciousness of the nation. It’s true. Most of us look back to some Golden Age of music and quote all the great singers and songs of that era, but the only reason we can manage that is by deleting all the rubbish that was around at the time. It’s true, there never was a decade when pop and rock were all authentically wonderful; in every era there’s good and bad, so we treasure the good, (in our view), and drop the mundane. Which is all fine, except that the only way we can do that is by rewriting history and leaving out the bits we don’t like. Try it: go on the internet and look up the Top Tens of yesteryear. I guarantee you will be embarrassed to see, just like a diamond among the stones, your most treasured memory flanked by stuff you would rather forget. That’s what we do: we make ourselves feel better by failing to remember the details. We select, we edit, we rearrange, and we construct. Our memories are not filing cabinets that contain all the files: they are scrapbooks of cuttings and family snaps, chosen and arranged to please us. But you know how you do that, don’t you? You start with a pile of photos and you end up with a selection. The rest? They’re ruthlessly thrown away. Like unwanted details.



Bill