Count to ten thousand! (Part 1)

oops, too slow with my 3309. How about a 3310?

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Hey, no fair! I didn’t realize you’d put two numbers in one post!!

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A trick of perspective — chance alignment mimics a cosmic collision

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I never understood cars as sexual objects.

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The sexiest car is the Mercury Mistress.

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music is horrible, will not buy

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http://krebsonsecurity.com/tag/3322-org/

Last week, Microsoft Corp. made headlines when it scored an unconventional if not unprecedented legal victory: Convincing a U.S. court to let it seize control of a Chinese Internet service provider’s network as part of a crackdown on piracy.

I caught up with Microsoft’s chief legal strategist shortly after that order was executed, in a bid to better understand what they were seeing after seizing control over more than 70,000 domains that were closely associated with distributing hundreds of strains of malware. Microsoft said that within hours of the takeover order being granted, it saw more than 35 million unique Internet addresses phoning home to those 70,000 malicious domains.

First, the short version of how we got here: Microsoft investigators found that computer stores in China were selling PCs equipped with Windows operating system versions that were pre-loaded with the “Nitol” malware, and that these systems were phoning home to subdomains at 3322.org. The software giant subsequently identified thousands of sites at 3322.org that were serving Nitol and hundreds of other malware strains, and convinced a federal court in Virginia to grant it temporary control over portions of the dynamic DNS provider.

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that’s quite a lineup; Bix on coronet, Eddie Lang on guitar, and Jimmy Dorsey on clarinet.

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I see your Tesla and raise you one.

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