Fermi Lab Compromised by Pirate 280
tttonyyy writes "The US Department of Energy sounded a full scale alert after machines were compromised at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, according to this BBC article. It turns out that the hacker was a student using the machines to download and store music and movies."
Education/Resach network (Score:5, Funny)
Shock Horror
Now if he'd accessed the controls for particle accelerator and was able to spin it up then thats news.
Re:Education/Resach network (Score:2)
In otherwords, he cracked out not in.
And the lab being compromised??? Puhleeze. I guess they need more funding. (or in the spirit of "No Child Left Behind"...less)
Re:Education/Resach network (Score:5, Funny)
Hacker's download list (Score:5, Funny)
The China Syndrome
re*ac*tor by Neil Young
Duke Nukem Platinum Edition
Christmas at Ground Zero by Weird Al
The Atomic Cafe
Everyone's favorite video clip of Janet Jackson's right breast
Re:Hacker's download list (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hacker's download list (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Hacker's download list (Score:5, Funny)
And somewhere, there is a hacker feverishly writing a visualization plugin for WinAmp to make use of that particle accelerator to make some really bitchin diplays.
Old news? (Score:5, Interesting)
And that sentence is... (Score:4, Interesting)
Nothing, aside from the notoriety of this trial, which may not even follow him that far - a google search on his name (Joseph McElroy) doesn't even turn up stuff referring to him in the first page. (That what he gets for sharing his name with a famous author)
The judge decided against jail time because "he had not accessed classified material on the network and had not intended to cause harm". Also, the monetary claim for damages against him was waived on the grounds that he wouldn't be able to pay it.
"not intended to cause harm"? "not intended to cause harm"? Tell me, can I bypass the metal detectors at Heathrow simply because I'm not carrying any weapons, and even if I were, intend to cause no harm with them? What if I just want to drive to the store and back, but would rather hotwire your car instead of walking?
Sure, I understand that the US has some truly brutal criminal trespass laws that are probably way out of proportion to the act they supposedly punish, and that therefore a UK judge might be more lenient in this case than a US one would, but... nothing?
Re:Ooops, my bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Hacking into a national research laboratory with a particle accelerator, attempting to unlock the secrets of the universe = 200 hours community service
Hacking into a Fortune 500 company, with a dedicated legal team and a public image to maintain = 3-5 years in a federal pound-you-in-the-ass prison.
Are we taking notes?
Dept. of Entertainment facility (Score:5, Insightful)
Given that he probably did it for the self-boast rather than space, he should be roasted.
Re:Dept. of Entertainment facility (Score:2)
Oh, you're a judge then?
Re:Dept. of Entertainment facility (Score:5, Insightful)
Um, no. (Score:2)
Re:Dept. of Entertainment facility (Score:2)
Re:Dept. of Entertainment facility (Score:4, Insightful)
Considering every machine at the lab has a hostname with a
not to mention the login warnings (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dept. of Entertainment facility (Score:4, Funny)
Are you sure? My guess is that it was a trap so he could roast someone else...
RIAA Goon: There! In the supercollider building- that's where the IP address of the machine with the illegal content is...
The goons enter the compound and proceed down a corridor when they reach a thick door with a sign on it.
MPAA Goon: It says "Entering Accelerator Core- Danger: High Velocity Neutrons and Gamma Rays".
RIAA Goon: Who the hell does this kid think he is? He can't fool us! We'll stuff so many lawsuits down his pants that his piss won't hit the floor when he wets his titey-whiteys!
|-|a> sees the goons on the security camera display on his screen, then opens up a terminal and types:
root@fermi1.fnal.gov:~ #cat
MPAA Goon: It's got to be around here somewhere...
low rumble, which increases in pitch...
RIAA Goon: What's that sound?
Not put in jail?! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:2)
Not that I support RIAA but the idea of them going after people sharing/downloading copyrighted material is the right thing. Their tactics might be questionable but that is a different point.
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:2)
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:5, Insightful)
Yea, because as we all know there are no colors but black and white.
That said, you're obviously not very intelligent, so you must be a total idiot.
Oh, what's that? I don't know anything about you other than that post? It doesn't matter, that post was stupid, and therefore you deserve to be classified as stupid, right? There's only black or white, so you must either be smart or stupid, and I think the post was pretty dumb, so you must be pretty dumb, correct?
Or, to put a more "on topic" spin on it, obviously, if you swerve to avoid a chipmunk and run over a child on a tricycle coming out of a blind driveway, it's clear that you are a horrendous murderer and therefore must be given the death penalty immediately. After all, there is no excuse for swerving onto the sidewalk whether you meant to or not, so you must be punished appropriately. You should be held just as responsible for your heinous crime as Ted Bundy was for his, becase you are obviously a "proper criminal" just like him.
The idea that you should be sentenced based on some rigid defintion of a crime rather than on your actual impact and your intended impact is so abysmally stupid that I have to call into question the intelligence of anyone who would try to support such a ridiculous idea. If he didn't do any damage and nobody can prove he intended to, he should be sentenced as a minor vandal and a moron. He should in no way, shape, or form be sentenced as if he had stolen sensitive information, damaged any of the equipment, etc. The idea of turning people into "examples" like that serves no purpose other than to deteriorate respect in the legal system. People need to be sentenced accordingly. He was an idiot, and he needs to be sentenced as one. He was not some undercover spy stealing sensitive information, so he shouldn't be sentenced as one. He wasn't even a hacker of any note and it doesn't appear that he was trying to be one, so, again, he shouldn't be sentenced as one.
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:5, Informative)
Its likely that he will end up being forced to sit in a sunny field in the middle of the Devon countryside smoking joints and drinking cans of extra strong lager with all the other community service peeps, while they supposedly dig some ditch that doesn't need to be dug so nobody will ever care about it actually being done or not.
That'll learn 'im.
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:2)
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:3, Insightful)
It was a non-violent crime and I don't think society would be one bit safer with him behind bars.
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:3, Insightful)
In Australia at least, 41 per cent of all inmates who had served a prison term [are] returning to jail within two years. [smh.com.au] I don't think any other country can boast of significantly better numbers (unless, of course, they immediately execute people found guilty.)
Rehabilitation is a subject that some people spend their whole lives studying, so I really
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:3, Insightful)
They could at the very least fine him for downloading and/or sharing copyrighted material. Not that I am pro-RIAA (far from it!), it's just that we've seen people fined for less than that in the US. Now that judge just looks dumb.
On the other hand, I always find it stupid when someone hacks into a computer, tells the company there's a securi
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:2)
Well, that's why you are not a judge, and I pray not, cuz judge's shouldn't be playing with "in their own opinion", they should follow the law.
OK then - but what about (Score:5, Insightful)
Which do you consider more dangerous:
#1 Script Kiddie being hacking server to store films on.
#2 Running a nuclear lab with so little security a script kiddie can break in.
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:3, Insightful)
The sentence does seem a bit light though. I think he should probbably have been forced to pay the 21K pounds restitution over a period of years (it's not _that_ much money).
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:2)
Personally, I really like the "what me worry?" photo of our friendly hacker [bbc.co.uk]. 73 - Martin
Re:Not put in jail?! (Score:5, Interesting)
I completely disagree. Furthermore, I think that yours may be the same kind of thinking that US legislators have when creating laws to cover new technology. Such black-and-white thinking seems pretty irresponsible to me. It does not allow for judges to use discretion, as this one has.
Let's take a look at it from a harm perspective. How much trouble did this really cause? Some kid cracking files to steal someone else's bandwidth -- this is akin to petty larceny -- maybe breaking and entry at worst. I can understand a judge opting for leniency in this case, the same way they may be inclined to opt for leniency for a breaking and entry case. Just because very few people understand the crime, doesn't necessarily mean that it should carry a requisite absolute punishment. That's just an overreaction -- no different from mandatory minimum sentencing for drug offenders. All that will do is overcrowd prisons and turn part-time petty criminals into full-time criminals. I don't know about English prisons, but I've seen US prisons -- from what I read in the article, this kid doesn't belong there.
Now, if McElroy had caused any real damage (like viewing classified material, etc) -- then an appropriate penalty shuold have been levied. However, unless our DoE computer centers are run by complete morons, there's probably a really good chance that classified materials were not available to McElroy. If this was apparent, it adds far more credibility to the argument that a 17-year-old kid (this was 2 years ago) was just screwing around.
On another note:
If there actually was classified material at stake, it begs the question: What asshole puts a network like this on the public Internet? Isn't that asking for a terrorist attack? It brings to mind another law: In some US states, it's illegal to leave your car idling with the key in it. It's ticketable and adds points to your license. Sure, if some asshole steals the car, it's far more illegal -- but it shares some of the responsibility wity the operator. Shouldn't someone at Fermi lab be held responsible for this as well? This is a DoE computer that my tax dollars paid for. I say that we should forget about creating more anti-terrorism laws. If someone makes the collosal fuck-up of making a classified system accessible on the public Internet, in any way, they should be penalized for negligently putting millions of lives at risk (allowing for flexible sentencing as the judge sees fit, of course).twit (Score:5, Insightful)
serves as proof that hackers aren't necessarily smart.
ed
Re:twit (Score:5, Interesting)
these type of guys scan just vast numbers of servers for flaws(open your apache log and you'll see a few) then open up some space on ftp and fxp some stuff to it from another(sometimes) similar ftp and then go post the thing on some list for fame(or tell it to some group of theirs). most companies never bother to raise hell over this, and most of the time it would be very difficult too as the ftp might have been used by hundreds of people all over from the globe.
Re:twit (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:twit (Score:2)
I think the word you're looking for is "script kiddie". "Flaw in the authentication method" probbably means one of the multiple holes in ssh.
I seriously doubt anyone but a script kid would be stupid enough to use a compromised server for anything as easily discoverable, and stupid as DLing mp3s and divx movies.
Re:twit (Score:2)
That'd fix him.
It could have been worse. (Score:5, Funny)
I know for a fact this could have been worse. I saw it at the theater. Full price.
now will the entertainment industry get him? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:now will the entertainment industry get him? (Score:2)
Re:now will the entertainment industry get him? (Score:2, Funny)
Damnit... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Damnit... (Score:4, Funny)
Pirates? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Pirates? (Score:2)
*sigh
Oh, offtopic.
Why is Fermi's network attached to the Internet? (Score:2, Insightful)
"Computers are an important feature of life in the 21st century," said Judge Goymer.
"Government, industry and commerce, as well as a whole variety of other institutions, depend upon the integrity and reliability of their computers in order that their proper and legitimate activities can be carried on."
And that's the problem, in a nutshell. Dependency on technology that's flawed. But the jud
Re:Why is Fermi's network attached to the Internet (Score:5, Informative)
There are thousands of computers at Fermilab, the vast majority which are desktop workstations running linux (logins are through Kerberos). Being your typical office computers sitting on a desk, they are connected to the internet via fairly high bandwidth. As we know, the WWW was invented in order for high-energy physicists to share data throughout the world, so not only does it not make sense for these machines to be cut off from the internet, it is an essential part of scientific research. Any machine that actually controls an aspect of an experiment (connected to any sort of particle accelerator or detector) is not likely to be connected to the internet.
So, yes, physicists and other scientists do depend on flawed technology, mostly because its the easiest way to be able to keep connected when you're dealing with large collaborations stretched across the world. The downside may be the occasional kid (wrongfully) taking advantage of a desktop machine attached to a T1 line. Where security is more vital, it is present. But its simply impossible to insure that everyone's desktop machine is secure or not.
No "real" harm done. (Score:3, Insightful)
Shame on the facility for having such weak security.
This is the very definition of 31337 (Score:2)
Though perhaps it wouldn't been 313373|2 to have never been caught... and use the compromised host as a public filesharing server.
Machines admin'ed by postdocs and grad students (Score:5, Interesting)
The national labs have done a good job at firewalling off the non-professionaly administered machines where feasible, but the academics really don't like anything that slows down collaboration. Thus there are lots of open machines, ftp and telnet still abound and give lots of opportunities to swipe usernames/passwords in the clear even though ssh and scp are available, etc.
Most (but not all) machines running the accelerator and the detectors are on their own mostly-private subnets.
Re:Machines admin'ed by postdocs and grad students (Score:3, Informative)
Yes but you forget to mention the rabid (to their credit) security team the lab has. The sniffers they have set up are effective.
It usually takes them less than 24 hours to identify a machine that has traffic patterns beyond the norm, often within one or two hours they can blackhole a port if warranted and hunt down the owner of the machine.
Previously I would have called it suicide to operate a largely unfirewalled n
Theoretical News Flash from Fermi Labs (Score:5, Funny)
In fact there seemed to be quite a lot of it in our reports, as well as some indication that the sound of the big bang was in fact a Britney Spears mp3...
Big Bang (Score:2)
Damn (Score:2)
"Arr, I'll supercollide ye!"
Silly (Score:4, Informative)
On the other hand, FermiLab does no defense/weapon work or any kind or any classified work as far as I know, a lot of people confuse it with Argonne National Lab (and be really glad Argonne wasn't named an Accelerator Lab, otherwise we'd have anal.gov)
-frin
stupid (Score:2)
As a fellow user in the same lab: (Score:5, Informative)
Here's what really happened. Users in one of the labs are all given web space on a web server. Now, the IT staff is low on manpower, with government funding behind diverted to the war in Iraq. So, security (among other things) is kind of lax.
Basically, McElroy ran Jack the Ripper on the password file. We're using an SGI 1400L from 1997. He got the root password, and removed the limits of his disk quota. Then, he stored a bunch of ripped DVD's and MP3's in his webspace.
Now you ask, why isn't the government making a big deal about this? They know their security policy is weak, and they just ramped it up. The 'alert' is really just a few days for them to get things back they way they should be. If they said "well, we won't prosecute him because if people really know what happened, it'd make us look bad", what would the American public (and rest of the world) think?!
Smuggling Atoms (Score:5, Funny)
"See? He's got atoms in his pockets! Call the local constabulary, Smithers!"
uhhh... yeah... (Score:2)
I'm not gonna put it past anyone, because you never know... but one must wonder why anyone with the knowledge necessary to do such a thing would waste it on downloading crap when they could just go to a WiFi hotspot, or hack into any random user's account. It seems a lot more likely that it would provide an innocuous cover for whatever it was they were really doing, and account for large volumes of bandwi
Re:uhhh... yeah... (Score:2)
Also at The Register (Score:2)
There's a Register [theregister.co.uk] article too.
Let's hear it for hackers from Woodford Green (come on, there must be more than just me and this guy).Compromised? Hacker? Pirate? (Score:5, Interesting)
How about a new headline: Student abuses Lab's computers.
Re:Compromised? Hacker? Pirate? (Score:2)
Pirate?? (Score:2, Redundant)
Oh yeah, I'm sure it was a pirate...
ya gotta love the stupidity that is the press these days.
From someone at Exeter Uni (Score:4, Informative)
I'm not condoning his actions, just trying to clear up some of the FUD
Associated Press newswire (Score:2)
Anyone who sights one of these monsters on their property is urged to contact either the RIAA or the Nuclear Regulatory Commission immediately. If you hear a wailing 'Ooops. I did it agaAAAI
I don't know much about the law... (Score:2)
The judge seemed to let him off the hook because he was unable to pay, and indeed, he'll be unable to pay for another three years or more. However, the judge could have sentenced him to work co-op terms (for the U.S. Government, reparing their security), or even deferred the payment plan
My Christ (Score:2)
The Slashdot *I* know would have a headline of "So-Called Hacker at Fermilab is Just a Student Warez Pirate".
Hmmmph.
Wonder what will happen when the USA gets him... (Score:3, Insightful)
Southwark Crown Court waived a demand for 21,000 in damages as it ruled that McElroy could not pay the fine.
That is the fine by britian. I wonder what british law he broke??
But he obviously broke USA law. I wonder if the FBI can arrest him and force his export.
I do not understand the culture of people thinking that they own everything. What gave this guy the right to steal bandwith from someone else? What gave him the right to steal the storage space? What gave him the right to break into someone elses pc?
The anwser is tougher laws and more extradition treaties. And by comparison, what ever happened to that phillapino kid who was caught writing viruses? I thought they threw the book at him. Why will the british kid get an easier sentance?
Re:Wonder what will happen when the USA gets him.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I do not understand the culture of people thinking that they own everything. What gave this guy the right to steal bandwith from someone else? What gave him the right to steal the storage space? What gave him the right to break into someone elses pc?
He's a script kiddie who stored some mp3s and movies on a poorly-secured machine in an unclassified lab.
He used some bandwidth and storage space for his personal conve
Only 200 hours? (Score:2, Insightful)
Particle Colliders (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's a brief description from the CERN [web.cern.ch] website:
What is LHC? The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a particle accelerator which will probe deeper into matter than ever before. Due to switch on in 2007, it will ultimately collide beams of protons at an energy of 14 TeV . Beams of lead nuclei will be also accelerated, smashing together with a collision energy of 1150 TeV.
A TeV is a unit of energy used in particle physics. 1 TeV is about the energy of motion of a flying mosquito. What makes the LHC so extraordinary is that it squeezes energy into a space about a million million times smaller than a mosquito.
The LHC is the next step in a voyage of discovery which began a century ago. Back then, scientists had just discovered all kinds of mysterious rays, X-rays, cathode rays, alpha and beta rays. Where did they come from? Were they all made of the same thing, and if so what? These questions have now been answered, giving us a much greater understanding of the Universe. Along the way, the answers have changed our daily lives, giving us televisions, transistors, medical imaging devices and computers. On the threshold of the 21st century, we face new questions which the LHC is designed to address. Who can tell what new developments the answers may bring?
Pirate? (Score:2)
Or...does he look like this [nypl.org]?
Pirate? How about hacker? (Score:4, Funny)
And what's the fine... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not defending that little hacker guy (erm, what kind of hacker is he anyway exploiting a known weakness to gain bandwidth and storage for MP3 and DivX files... I'd rather make him manually punch one of these files into punch tape instead of those 200 hours civil service which he might find even interesting), but if you run a high-security network infrastructure, then you better be up-to-date with the latest patches and countermeasures. It's not done with applying the latest IE "security update" every Tuesday...
Now calling for a more drastic punishment and considering the current (IMO fair) one as a green light, just shows what's wrong with some people: If hijacking company computers and networks for bandwidth and storage abuse becomes an increasingly common practice in the online world than those "security experts" should probably do their homework and fix the systems instead of calling the cops.
If you leave your car open and someone steals your car hifi, it's entirely your fault. (Go ask your insurance...) Whose car it is shouldn't play a role when sentencing the thief.
Ahoy! (Score:3, Funny)
Damn it. I was expecting a bit of coastal raiding action from this story. Maybe black flags with the skull and crossbones. A little rapine and pillaging of the Fermi Lab.
Damn corruption of the English language.
Fermilab "sensitive"? Huh? (Score:3, Informative)
Why does everybody seem to think that Fermilab is some kind of sensitive facility? News flash: Fermilab is a basic research facility, not a top secret weapons lab. Their security is lax because they really don't have anything to hide. All their results are available to the public anyway. After all, that is sort of the whole point of basic research. And it's not like the compromised computer was part of the control system or anything. Fermilab has a lot of computers. The place is huge.
Besides which, if you actually read about the case you'd realize that this guy had access to the computers anyway and all he did was crack the root password to increase his disk quota. Now, I'm not saying that's a good thing but it's more like abuse of a computer lab than anything.
Fermi Lab Test Results (Score:3, Funny)
Fermi Labs announced the production of a new supersized sub-atomic particle, boxons. Boxons were created by smashing oxygen with bosons (another sub-atomic particle).
Examined through the most powerful microscope in the world, the boxon appears to be a cardboard box, with the words "Shroedinger's Cat" written on the side. Sadly, the box is empty.
Fermi Lab Compromised by Pirate (Score:2)
Student: Pirate
Crackers are doing us a BIG favour (Score:3, Insightful)
Those machines, and many others are just as open to our enemies the likes of which include Osama Bin Laden, Saddam Hussein (before he was captured) and many others. Had they cracked in (which they may well have done and may well be doing), the machines will probably not be used as a receptical for kiddie porn.
Were it not for kids that are just mucking about poking their collective digits where the authorities would rather not be poked - our authorities would remain FAT DUMB and HAPPY dreaming their collective bliss.
We live in the real world where we have many real enemies. We need secure systems that we can count on. Each time some kid pokes his finger into a vulnerable spot it helps to educate the masses that they really do need to pay attention.
Perhaps the judge in this case realises this. 200 hours is a suitable punishment, even if it is perhaps a little severe.
One thing that I think needs to be recognised is that there are many would be very competant systems admins who frequent slash dot. Many of these people would relish a well paying job and could be gainfully employed closing these security holes. Perhaps our authorities and joe sixpack in general should open their eyes and smell the coffee here.
Article is completely wrong in almost all details! (Score:3, Informative)
I have personally seen Windows machines shut down within minutes and their wireless cards confiscated when brought onto the site if a virus is detected. These scans are not optional to the user and are automatically performed. The fact that this user was caught and security tightened to prevent recurrences is proof that there is good security there. The comments above are almost all completely uneducated.
Finally, as noted above by some (few) intelligent readers, the story is old and is really about sentencing. there has been no recent compromise.
Troll-prevention note and disclaimer: For those who think the above or the story itself is an invitation to hack, I can point out that several such attempts occur per day, keeping the security team busy and alert, but that essentially all of them fail and the rare successful ones earn the attention of the FBI.
Legal precedent set with punishment (Score:3, Interesting)
According to CNN http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/internet/02/03/brita
See, the US and UK really ARE allies in the war against... ummm... are we FOR or AGAINST script kiddies this week?
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:5, Informative)
Not True. I work at IT another accelerator lab in the US, and the control network is on an entirely different network firewalled off, MAC restricted, etc. Even the software engineers responsible for the control system have to be wired behind the firewall.
On a not unrelated note, we have been hacked several times by people uploading movies, MP3s, etc. The system was never rebuilt and the files were simply deleted. In general accelerator labs are not staffed for the super-anal security that you would expect (to say nothing of the number of MP3s, etc. that legitimate users have on the server)...
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:3, Funny)
Evil solution: Take MP3s, DivXs, etc.; modify them to include very badly 'hidden' steganographic information that looks like it came from terrorists. Replace originals. Wait for uploaders to download them again. Anonymously tip-off FBI that said h4x0r may be involved in terrorism. FBI search their hard drives, shit hits the fan.
Step 3- Profit! Oh
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:5, Informative)
That's not to say that massive damage/downtime can't be done by breaking into the right machines.
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:4, Interesting)
one medium skilled cracker could easily cause insane damage/havoc by getting into those systems.
does the management care? nope. and if this is for a important thing like a water filtration plant, there is a very GOOD chance that their "critical" systems are just as open.
Important systems need to be disconnected completely. there is no reason to read your email or surf the net on the control Pc's.
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:2)
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:2)
If it's not there in 30 femto-seconds, is it free?
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:2)
Indeed, that sounds very dangerous. They ought to secure their computer systems, eh?
People are quick to blame the hacker/cracker/script kiddie but that's the easy way out. If companies and organizations don't take security seriously, a dangerous incident like this could happen.
But who cares, right?
who the hell modded this insightful? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, and what villages? They're 45 miles outside Chicago - not the smallest place. Don't worry though. Unless top quarks, CP violation experiments, and Boson experimentation threaten explosion, I think we're ok. Just try researching the subject. "fermilab" I'm feeling lucky gets you there.
Mod parent down (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This is dangerous. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:FULL TEXT (Score:5, Informative)
Have a look here [bbc.co.uk] to see their traffic. Totals are here [bbc.co.uk]. They can handle 2gb/sec. Thats some monster pipe, and it will take some severe slashdotting.
On the count of three, hit refresh like a mofo. If all 600,000 of us do it we might just create a tiny lump on that graph.
Re:FULL TEXT (Score:3, Funny)
McElroy's note to self: next time store music and video on BBC computers, not FermiLab.
Re:FULL TEXT (Score:2)
Either that or those links are b0rked
Re:Money Making vs IP Stealing.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Kids need to learn that downloading is not entirely free. You could have done something constructive in the time it takes you to cozy up to some release group on IRC, find a usable pub, looking for fills, fixing files with CRC errors, etc.
Not to mention the obsessive compulsive facet of downloading where you feel a need to keep your machine downloading at all times for fear of letting perfectly good bandwidth go to waste, at which point you go out to scour the net for something -- any