SETI Finally Finds Something 416
QuatumCrypto writes "SETI@home is a distributed processing client from UC Berkeley that installs on the volunteers' home computers and harnesses their processing power in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. So far nothing noteworthy has comeout of this massive project... that is until today! One of the volunteers was able to track down his wife's stolen laptop using the IP address that SETI@home client reports back to the server. After getting back the laptop his wife said, 'I always knew that a geek would make a great husband.'"
Welcome (Score:5, Funny)
Those of you that are visiting Slashdot for the first time and didn't know that, you might want to stick around (and scroll down) because we're going to explain what a Beowulf Cluster is next.
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And Netcraft confirms it!
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2) make soviet russia joke
3) make netcraft reference
4) ?????
5) profit!!!
One too many? You decide!
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Chuck & the List (Score:3, Funny)
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O <-- You.
--|--
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/ \
:)
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RTFM (Score:3, Funny)
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That explains it, I guess...
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'Woman' will also, if left unchecked, upgrade automatically from 'friend 9.2' to 'girlfriend 3.4' and eventually to 'wife 1.0'. If this happens the only way to get rid of 'woman' is via very expensive software... 'divorce 1.0' which will leave you with even less money than when you had 'wife 1.0' problems.
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Never mind, perhaps I'm new here.
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Hwæt?
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A Beowulf cluster is a group of usually identical PC computers running a Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) Unix-like operating system, such as Linux or BSD. They are networked into a small TCP/IP LAN, and have libraries and programs install
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But then, that's typical slashdot...
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Oh well, at least it was posted anon. That way there's no karma whoring.
Still there's still some room for blatantly obvious karma whoring for the people explaining the plagiarism and other follow up meta-comments pointing out the blatant karma whoring. Followed by post that explain how the moderation system works.
I suppose I should leave some grammatical and spealing errors in this comment to set up someone else for some cheap mod points.
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sETi ... (Score:5, Funny)
Does this mean (Score:5, Funny)
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totally flattered about her statement on geeks making great husbands
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Gah! (Score:5, Funny)
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It's a trap! (Score:3, Funny)
solution for everyone else (Score:5, Interesting)
Write a small script, I call it "callhome" and a line in your crontab to have it called each hour.
~>cat bin/callhome
#!/bin/bash
rm -f ~/.locate-laptop
date > ~/.locate-laptop
w >> ~/.locate-laptop
scp -q ~/.locate-laptop remote_user@108.169.242.00:~
~>grep callhome
27 * * * * username
You'll have to set up public key login with no passphrase for the scp
to work without a password to the remote machine
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And what would stop someone from deleting the disk partitions and installing windows?
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It's the difference between protection and recovery. drDugan's callhome (and TFA's use of SETI@home, of course) provides a chance of recovery but reduces protection (they can boot it). Locking down the boot sequence provides pretty solid protection, but your chances of getting it back move closer to nil.
Re:solution for everyone else (Score:5, Interesting)
Hell, activate a keylogger while you're at it, and you'd have no trouble finding out exactly who they are.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Let me get this straight: you have a machine that you're obviously worried about being stolen configured to have passwordless ssh access to your remote machine? May I recommend HTTP instead?
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Would it also trigger mindless fear for you if the OP used a CGI script on a web server? The potential security problems there would be slightly greater than the no-input login script.
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In all seriousness though... (Score:5, Informative)
It could be nicely open sourced, and run via a p2p network to distribute the load for the tracking servers. Obviously a lot of details would have to be worked out to avoid abuse, but it could be as simple as sending an "I'm here" message encrypted with a dedicated private key to the p2p network. The person who wants to track their stolen goods just pops the public key (stored on a CD/usb stick/online, generated on install) into the network and it comes back with the last known location. No?
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Unsupported Browser Detected! We're sorry, the Computrace LoJack for Laptops self-management site does not support the web browser you are currently using. You must use Internet Explorer 5.5 (or later) to access this site.
Don't expect magic where you can't even see competence.
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That's an interesting claim. First of all I would guess they are going with the DOS/Windows definitition of a format. If that's what they are talking about, then yes, it is technically possible because although a format rewrites a partition, it does not change the initial code that gets loaded from the disk, which resides in the MBR (Master Boot Record). The MBR points to the partition that the OS sits on, and you ca
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I've seen P2P networks proposed as the solution to everything on Slashdot. Intermittent less-than-1-kilobyte pings carrying a unique user ID are not unmanageable.
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A homebrew solution (or hoping that something like seti@home went unnoticed) would be your best bet.
ouch (Score:5, Funny)
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And if that guy really is a geek, what do you think he was doing the night he got his stolen laptop back? Huh? HUH?!
From the TFA: (Score:5, Insightful)
How, exactly, do you break into a personal folder? Is double-clicking it called "breaking" in these days? I thought the conventional term was "opening"...
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Here is a perfectly valid example: I copy a Microsoft "encrypted" file from a workstation to a file share which also happens to have NTFS. That file will be encrypted at the workstation, and it will be encrypted on the file server. It will NOT be encrypted over the wire. That may even be okay for some peopl
SETI (Score:2)
What a crock! (Score:5, Funny)
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<ducks>
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Old News (Score:2, Interesting)
One was recovered. I don't know out of how many thefts, but it worked.
http://stats.distributed.net/participant/psearch.p hp?project_id=5&st=coreyfro [distributed.net]
Some are still posting to this day.
216264(-1) K6231862@coreyfro.com 13-Feb-2001 08-Feb-2002 361 791
218871(-1) K3342513@coreyfro.com 31-Jan-2
Nothing noteworthy (Score:5, Insightful)
Dismissed a trend-setting project with just that one line. Of course, it does not matter that SETI@Home showed the power of volunteer computing for the first time, led to new advances in distributed computing, motivated Grid computing and PlanetLab among others and spun off BOINC, an open source project that serves as a base for similar @Home projects.
But, of course, it no find me any ALIEN!!! Bah,
SETI finds... (Score:4, Funny)
What a let down (Score:5, Funny)
I haven't felt this let down since I walked in on my dad bangin my mom while wearing a Santa costume on Christmas morning.
Re:What a let down (Score:4, Funny)
And you thought (Score:2)
A good logo for SETI... (Score:3, Funny)
She's in for a shock... (Score:5, Funny)
Sure it turned out handy this one freak incident, but wait till there's smoke in the house and he looks back and forth between the plasma screen and the laptop a couple times, finally grabs the laptop and is out the door without so much as a look in her direction.
Of course, if the laptop started the fire then the choice is much easier
Tsk, noob (Score:4, Funny)
You have her grab the laptop and you grab the plasma screen. Geez. You call yourselve a geek and cannot even figure out this simple puzzel?
Now if the comment had been "I always knew that a geek would make a great father" then you would have had a point.
A better solution for everyone else. (Score:3, Informative)
See the Google cache of "Exactly what the Dr. Ordered"
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:Ui0HtwBn6ZAJ:w ww.kyne.com.au/~mark/software/satellite.php+site:w ww.kyne.com.au+mark+satellite&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&i e=UTF-8 [72.14.253.104]
I know the posting is just a oneliner, but it is informative and if everybody used the software it would really increase the recovery rate of stolen Laptops no end. ( Unix based ones anyway )
Wait a minute... (Score:3, Funny)
I RTFA, and the police used the IP to locate the laptop, but no one has been arrested. Hmmm...
MIB: "We'll take over from here."
Police Man: "But this thug stole a woman's laptop!"
(MIB puts on dark glasses)
MIB: "Officer, I'm going to need you to stare into this pen for me for just a second..."
Geek or Alien? (Score:4, Funny)
SETI finding intelligent life?
or a GEEK getting married?
SETI == ? (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:Stop the headline grab-assing please (Score:4, Interesting)
Agreed - "finally finds something" is harsh (Score:5, Interesting)
Quite apart from the Wow! [wikipedia.org] signal (so I guess they found something after all), there's a world of difference between the Seti@home distributed computer program, and the SETI institute - a collection of individuals who have SETI-capable telescopes [gornall.net]. The SETI institute is not at all connected with SETI@home, and it is they who are 'seti', or at least they have the greatest claim, having been 'SETI' for years previously...
It's not actually hard to make a radio telescope - get a big dish, an LNA (low-noise amplifier for the signal), a microwave receiver, and a PC (windows or linux). Oh, and lots of space for that dish
Simon.
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Re:Stop the headline grab-assing please (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, I believe you mispelled grep.
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Ah. A vast improvement over the usual, then.
Re:Question... (Score:5, Informative)
All blocks of IP addresses are owned by somebody, mostly ISPs.
Once you have an IP address, you look up who owns it and you call them. They do their research, looking at things such as DNS records, DHCP assignments, DSLAM logs, etc... They then look up which customer that was, and there you go.
In a corporate enviroment a simply DNS lookup should give you a computer name, a little more the switchport it's connected to, and a little digging who's logged into it.
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(emphasis mine)