http://au.news.yahoo.com/070824/2/149s7.html
Quote:
Originally Posted by article
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http://au.news.yahoo.com/070824/2/149s7.html
Quote:
Originally Posted by article
Those damn australian kids with there sex, porn, drugs, violence, hax!ng
On a Mac...
I see you never read cybernetframe hacking 101.Quote:
Originally Posted by mendhak
I want that dude on our school to disable the friggin novell client...
ROFLMFAO Novell netware is so '98! Funny how schools are always behind the times.
Well you probably aren't going to believe it, but we were still using 98 about 2 years back...
I do believe it
My high school had a hodge-podge of computers, ranging from P2 233's and Win98 to P4 2.0's with WinXP... the network was slow as crap...
dead link for me ... i wanna read it
plez post story
....
Quote:
A 16-year-old schoolboy has cracked the federal government's $84-million internet porn filter.
Tom Wood, a Year 10 student, told News Ltd newspapers it took him about 30 minutes to break through the government's new filter, released on Tuesday.
Tom, who attends a Melbourne private school, can deactivate the filter after several clicks.
His method ensures the software's toolbar icon is not deleted.
He can leave his parents believing the filter is still working.
Tom, a former cyber bullying victim, fears a computer-savvy child could put the bypass on the internet for others to use.
"It's a horrible waste of money," he said. "They could get a much better filter for a few million dollars made here rather than paying overseas companies for an ineffective one."
Communications Minister Helen Coonan said the government had anticipated children would find ways to get around the NetAlert filters.
Suppliers were contracted to provided updates, Senator Coonan said.
"The vendor is investigating the matter as a priority.
"Unfortunately, no single measure can protect children from online harm and ... traditional parenting skills have never been more important."
Family First senator Steve Fielding, a cyber safety campaigner, said cracking the software highlighted the need for compulsory filtering by internet providers.
"You need both. You need it at the ISP and at the PC level," Senator Fielding said. "The Government has not listened to common sense and it leaves kids exposed."
Actually, the link was dead, I found an equivalent article and changed the link. That's where your quote is from.
are you sure we weren't on the same high school... :pQuote:
Originally Posted by timeshifter
probably not... must be some standard routine... :afrog:
lol.. I didn't go to school in the debug window... probably would have learned more if I had...