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Posted on 07/02/2004 10:22:06 AM PDT by JustPiper
Picture credit: TheCabal
"I will never cower before any master nor bend to any threat"
FBI urges vigilance for July 4
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A constant stream of intelligence indicating that al Qaeda wants to strike the United States this summer or fall has led federal officials to urge increased vigilance during the Independence Day weekend, but there is no specific threat of an attack timed to the holiday.
We are the "Stotters" who make ourselves aware of the enemy who wishes to do us harm
Meet It!
Greet It!
Defeat It!
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
Thanks, I hope so too!
Another humor break:
Subject: Passport Please
The elderly American gentleman arrived in Paris by plane.
At the French Customs counter, he fumbled for his passport.
"You 'ave been to 'Franze' before, monsieur?" the customs officer
asked sarcastically.
The old gent admitted that he had been to France previously.
"Zen, you should know enough to 'ave your passport ready for inspection."
The American said, "The last time I was here, I didn't have to show it."
"Zat is impossible! You Americans alwayz 'ave to show your passports on arrival in Franze!"
The American senior gave the Frenchman a long, hard look. Then he quietly explained.
"Well, when I came ashore at Omaha Beach on D-Day in '44, I couldn't find any Frenchmen to show it to."
Group threatens to kill Bulgarians
Thursday, July 8, 2004 Posted: 7:42 PM EDT (2342 GMT)
(CNN) -- An Iraqi insurgent group has threatened to behead two Bulgarian hostages within 24 hours if the United States does not release all prisoners in Iraq, according to a video aired by Al-Jazeera.
Video showed the two unidentified Bulgarians sitting down with their hands tied, while three armed masked men stood behind them........
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/07/08/iraq.bulgaria/index.html
Mozilla user alert:
Security hole found in Mozilla browser
By John Borland
CNET News.com
July 8, 2004, 6:25 PM PT
Developers at the open-source Mozilla Foundation have confirmed that the latest version of their Web browsers have a security flaw that could theoretically allow attackers to crash computers or launch unauthorized programs.
The flaw was publicized Wednesday on a security mailing list, along with a link to a fix for the problem . Updated versions of the affected software programs, which include the Mozilla, Firefox and Thunderbird browsers, have been released. (snipped)
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1105_2-5262676.html
Had a voter survey call--tailored for NM. Sure gave lots of VERY CONSERVATIVE responses!
Couldn't find out who was paying for it.
Seemed to be worded more fairly than the DIMRAT polls often are.
Yes...I thought it was pretty neat that if you visit Mozilla.org with firefox then it will come right out and tell you this...and it gives you the link to install the patch -which takes seconds. The patch can be installed on nescape 7.1 also...for those who use that. I just had someone try it and it worked. Anyone using a mozilla product should visit
http://www.mozilla.org/security/shell.html
That article is not good news. I searched al-jezerra (sp?) and didn't find anything.
The blackout happened around 12:40 a.m. Wednesday, leaving some 10,500 Pacific Gas and Electric customers in the city without power for most of the night. The outage area stretched from Pierson's in south Eureka to Myrtletown and west to Humboldt Bay. Power was restored shortly after 6 a.m.
"There are a lot of things at play here. Today and tomorrow are going to be critical. In the summer Thursday is a big day for us in terms of load," Sheri Foote, spokeswoman for the state's largest utility, Arizona Public Service, said. Foote said the utility should know by mid-afternoon whether rolling blackouts may be needed.
The outage took out power for 1,800 customers on both sides of Akers Street north and south of Highway 198, said Glen Cardaronella, spokesman for Southern California Edison. The problem was a bad transformer and underground connections.
The outage, which began at 7:45 a.m., was the latest in a series of blackouts that have affected Gonzales in the past few days.
To restore power Wednesday, crews fixed an insulator on Highway 101 in Soledad, said PG&E spokesman Brian Swanson. An insulator connects high voltage wires to the wire pole.
The agency said its investigating the cause of the disruption at its Cranbury data center. Power was restored at 10:53 a.m. EDT, according to a spokesman, who told Newspapers & Technology that systems were switched to APs backup data center in Kansas City, Mo.
The outage is the first since the Cranbury data center went into operation in 1993, AP said. It occurred during a routine test of generator and UPS backup systems, said John Reid, APs senior vice president for services and technology.
The power went out just before 8 a.m. in an area bordered by Valle Vista Road and state Route 67 to the northwest down to Rockcrest Road to the south and El Monte Road to the east, SDG&E spokeswoman Stephanie Donovan said.
The cause of the outage is under investigation and it was not determined when power would be restored, Donovan said.
"There is a lot of underground circuitry in that area, so this might take a while," Donovan said. "But we are working our hardest to find the problem."
OH and if you download firefox...a new version has already been released with the patch incorperated. Try that with IE.
Former Kuwaiti ambassador says it would be 'catastrophic' for Mideast if Kerry wins (AP) 8 July 2004
KUWAIT CITY - It would be "catastrophic" for the Middle East if Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry was elected to the White House, a former Kuwaiti ambassador to Washington said in comments published yesterday.
Shaikh Saud Al Nasser Al Sabah, who was Kuwait's ambassador to the United States when Republican president George Bush formed a US-led coalition to liberate Kuwait from Saddam Hussein's Iraqi army in the 1991 Gulf War, said a Republican government would do a better job in solving the region's problems. "If the American administration changes in November, it will be catastrophic ... because those Democrats do not understand a thing about foreign policy, and they lack the determination to make decisions the way (President George W.) Bush made them in Iraq and elsewhere," Shaikh Saud told Al Siyassah daily in an interview conducted recently in Kuwait.
Shaikh Saud told the daily that he feared a Democratic government would "fumble" when making decisions about the Middle East. (snipped)
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/middleeast/2004/July/middleeast_July219.xml§ion=middleeast&col=
USA
"POSSIBLE SURVEILLANCE TESTING TACTICS" Police bulletin reports K-9 cops on high alert over "suspicious packages pattern." Five empty suitcases left at Penn Station, FBI headquarters and other hot spots: 3,000 police with bomb-sniffing dogs will sweep 3,000 subways and trains entering Penn Station after warnings terrorists may be preparing Madrid-type attack on railways. (NY Post) PATTERNS OF GLOBAL TERRRORISM said terrorist attacks in 2003 down from 198 in 2002 to 190, but up from 77 to 88 against U.S. interests. Figures exclude Iraq.
http://www.sofmag.com/display.do?id=54
Power shortage: 6,400 factories to go off-line
www.chinaview.cn 2004-07-09 09:29:00
BEIJING, July.9(Xinhuanet) -- Due to summer's unquenchable power thirst, about 6,400 industrial enterprises in and around Beijing will be shut down for a week.(snip)
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2004-07/09/content_1585437.htm
Remember to keep your cars/trucks gas tanks at least 1/2 full at all times. If we lose power the pumps won't work.
One more interesting thing. I just read somewhere else that the mozilla exploit only worked in windows xp and windows 2000. I don't know if that is true or not.
Hey...I agree with the guy. If the John-John team gets in then we might as well bend over and kiss....
"Due to summer's unquenchable power thirst, about 6,400 industrial enterprises in and around Beijing will be shut down for a week.(snip)"
Prices are going up at Wal-mart...LOL
When CERT advised against using IE, my computer geek son advised me to use Opera. I don't much about Mozilla (or Opera), but I noticed several posts from people who switched to Mozilla and Firefox. I adopted Granny's philosophy of welcoming all the help I can get, and I hope we can all help each other so nobody gets hacked.
HMMMMMMM.
I agree. It surprised me to see it in print in this newspaper.
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