Sep. 26th, 2003

substitute: (pinhead)
The following is a list of coworkers that I, or people I know, have had. Without comment. I think one of the best reasons to work at jobs instead of getting money some other way is meeting maniacs. Please add your own if you wish to do so!

1. Lived on fatty meat and generic package cookies. Frequently said he would not live past fifty. Would ask for extra fatty meat from the work cafeteria, and drank at least 1.5L of Dr. Pepper per day. Once was written up for cooking goat meat in microwave at work. Slid slowly into schizophrenia during his tenure at this job. What was in the chili he brought to pot luck?

2. Called everybody "Chief", "Big Guy", or "Killer"; women were "Gal" or "Babe". Wore really tight shirts. Would poke you and say "Hey Ace!" before asking a question.

3. Made speaker cabinets out of depleted uranium. They glowed at night and you were not supposed to get too close to them.

4. Was obsessed with Star Wars to the point that he had a tableau of figurines on his desk that no one was allowed to touch. Wore odd-looking scifi shoes with space hardware on them. Lost his scifi sunglasses once and sent an all company email begging for them back.

5. Showed up at the office drunk every day, holding a coffee mug of Jack. Drove an ice cream truck for his regular transportation. Threw up in his wastebasket regularly.

6. Worked naked in his office. Liked to go home and have some "Conan Powder" and then lift a heavy weight to feel strong. Was a rather freaked-out "furry".

7. Always carried Tabasco, real maple syrup, and a gun in her car. Would sexually harass the other women on the night shift. Told me she was going to kill me; I quit. Would punch a hole in the wall if you called her by her real name.

8. Greeted everyone with "Howdy-Hi!" and left saying "Cyah-bye!". Worshipped disk jockey Rick Dees, and wished to be him. Was a Mormon but wanted to fit in, so drank Martinelli's Sparkling CIder at parties. Ended up as a professor of career counseling.

9. Was a "professional writer" on a business communications course, but could not find the asterisk key on his keyboard. Often slept at his desk. When at the urinal, he would clap his hands in childish glee after he completed "number one".

10. Began every sentence with "Be advised that" and ended it with "at this time" like a cop or an airline pilot. Apparently owned only one shirt. Kept cases of candy at his desk. Eventually left with no notice after saying he had to "take care of some stuff".

11. Was terminated from his employment and taken away by the police for spying on women in women's bathrooms on several floors in the building. He had been married three weeks.

12. Typed at 120 wpm with perfect accuracy while dead drunk, and after smoking huge quantities of the weed. Flew into a rage when anyone questioned his reports, and was almost always right. Disappeared one New Year's eve and never came back.

13. Loved firing people, preferably in the middle of a sales meeting ("YOU! CLEAN OUT YOUR DESK AND LEAVE!"). Wrote restaurant reviews in longhand which staff had to retype. Was once seen dancing about in the bathroom saying to himself happily "Lucky, lucky, lucky!" Paid his coke dealer in company checks.

14. Told everyone in her first week that she was a witch, and that if other employees were not nice to her she would hex them. Was not joking about this. Did nothing at all, not one thing, as an employee. Quit with no notice and then asked for a reference.

15. Told the same story, all day long, in a loop, about her ex boyfriend leaving a message on her voicemail. Showed her coworker horribly blurry pictures of her cat that she was going to enter in a cat photography contest. Never, ever stopped talking. Ever. Security guard informed coworker that "you shouldn't be polite, just walk out of the room while she's talking."
substitute: (saddam dictator)
I guess that "Post 9/11", loyalty is a lot more important than actual security. In the corporate world as well as in politics.

From: "Patrick J. Kobly" <patrick@kobly.com>
Date: Fri Sep 26, 2003 08:45:18 US/Pacific
To: bugtraq@securityfocus.com
Subject: @Stake pulls pin on Geer: Effect on research and publication
Attachments: There is 1 attachment


CNET is reporting that @Stake fired Dan Geer yesterday:

http://news.com.com/2100-1014_3-5082649.html

Over a recent CCIA report coauthored by him, and released Wednesday:

http://www.ccianet.org/papers/cyberinsecurity.pdf

@Stake's comments - "The values and opinions of the report are not in
line with @Stake's views" explaining Geer's termination are concerning
for a company that claims "we must not be afraid to take things apart,
understand how they work, and share that information with the world."
[http://www.atstake.com/research/]

It should be noted that the CCIA report tries to examine the Microsoft
desktop monopoly, and its effect on the security of the Internet and
the digital world at large. This is in direct line with @Stake's
stated research objectives. The fact that the conclusions drawn may
not be the same as those drawn by other @Stake researchers does not
justify silencing this discussion.

@Stake and other security companies and organizations need to act now
to encourage discussion of root causes of insecurity on the net - even
if these causes are not fundamentally technical in nature. It is, in
fact, these causes - the political and economic ones - that are the
most difficult ones to fix. As a result, it is these factors that
must be brought into the public eye, exposed to more scrutiny, so that
we may address them.

What @Stake has done here is simply confirm to other security
researchers that the publication of unpopular research will directly
affect their pocketbooks. @Stake has set researchers' financial
security and job security at odds with their professional ethics and
research standards. Will the next researcher working at @Stake or
Symantec, or Security Focus hesitate to publish controversial research
because he is worried for his financial well-being?

PK
--
"I am committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the
President next year."
-- Wally O'Dell - CEO of Diebold, Inc. (One of the largest American
manufacturers of election machinery)
substitute: (milkman)
This is for [livejournal.com profile] hensatc, with hugs and goosing.

Jeff Stryker goes country and has a great time!

Tip: Not work or brain safe. HTH, HAND.

THANK GOD

Sep. 26th, 2003 03:40 pm
substitute: (Default)
I finally got headphones so I can listen to music at work and don't have to hear the cow-orkers enjoying Taiwanese pop, the Nu Krap Rokk on our extreme sports network, or their AIM sounds at 180 dB.

THANK GOD

again:

THANK GOD.
substitute: (Default)
The headphones hurt my ears. I guess there's a reason they cost $5.

I need to get another pair of those Koss earbuds.

I listened to a straight hour of punk rock and then a guy I don't like at work walked by and I had to resist cluebatting the shit out of him out of sheer manic punktastic joy.

I have to work Sunday morning. I am not looking forward to this. ARE YOU READY FOR SOME FOOT BA'AL?

I believe I'll make a good loaf of bread to take to the Beckers' how-swarming tomorrow.

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substitute: (Default)
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