@MadaraUchiha This is how I imagine it playing out, people like comodo will only have big corp as clients and most of the business will be stuff like pen-testing. Which is fine, I have no problem with it, as long as there is a free option as well. People can pay for extras but the basic tech should be free (as with pretty much everything)
you don't have significant costs to maintaining certificates
So paying you monthly/yearly is clearly a scam
Also, with 93824723094826734236 bodies, you know for a fact that some of them are corrupted/insecure/joined forces with the NSA (which are the best agency in the world, and I have no ill will towards them whatsoever), and you have no way of knowing which is which.
@PaulCrovella To verifying the authenticity of a domain holder, and providing them with a certificate.
@MadaraUchiha that's not particularly difficult and you're not paying for that, you're paying for the trust everyone else has in them that chains down to you
@PaulCrovella SSL does not guarantee that the content is safe and was never designed to do so, only that the server you are talking to services the domain that it claims to
@PaulCrovella As long as the CA trust chain mechanisms are verifiable (and by OSing it, it is) then commercial CAs aren't any more trustworthy than a free one - arguably less so, in fact
the employee login function checks whether session variable admin is true .if
it is it ll not let employee to login i want this one to be rewritten as both admin & employee can be logged in at the same time without session collission
setting sessionkeys does not help
Admin controller > this is m...
@PaulCrovella Well, the whole thing is that you can't demand that people give back anything. You want to be an open community where everything should be voluntary.
facepalm .. got to love banks. Their XML api fails to recognize an identifier (iDeal merchant ID) and the reaction?: Sorry, we can not give technical support, please contact the company that created your plugin.
@DamienOvereem My dad used to work for a bank, my misses works for an insurance broker owned by a bank. I've considered more than once just keeping my money under the mattress...
Odd fact: banks have like a cost of ownership of 300% compared to the average company where software is concerned. Usability however probably comes down to just about 30%.
Respond to their reactien. Save. "Your session has expired, please login". .. and ofcourse your entire response is gone.
@Oldskool That's why I'm working on an invisibility mattress. People have suggested that a cloak would be more useful, but one day I shall be vindicated!
@DamienOvereem Ugh, I really don't understand what's wrong with this generation. Looking up to those vloggers, I'm like ... so you're watching someone else's life, is yours really so boring that you need to lower yourself to that?
And also @DamienOvereem fyi English never uses an apostrophe when pluralising, this also really annoys me but since English is not your first language I won't hold it against you
Apostophes are used for possession and contraction, never for pluralisation
Anonymous
@Oldskool It's mad that there's a multi-million pound/dollar industry based on someone recording part of their day (Normally around 20 mins) and uploading it for people to watch (Editing involved too.. But still, what a life)
But anyways.. I disagree. Lego is no longer a brand because it is famous as it is. Basically comes down to "googling" something. You no longer "do a google search", but you "google something". Imho Lego is a thing aswell, so it would be "a lego" or "legos"
@DamienOvereem This I'm not sure about. I think "cola" is a think in its own right, given that coca-cola is called this because it used to be made with coca
> Cola is a sweetened, carbonated soft drink, derived from drinks that originally contained caffeine from the kola nut and cocaine from coca leaves, flavored with vanilla and other ingredients. Most colas now use other flavoring (and caffeinating) ingredients with a similar taste. Colas became popular worldwide after pharmacist John Pemberton invented Coca-Cola in 1886.[1] His non-alcoholic recipe was inspired by the coca wine of pharmacist Angelo Mariani, created in 1863.[1]