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12-Feb-10 News - PCs still vulnerable to Chinese 'Aurora'

Posted: Thu Feb 11, 2010 10:02 pm
by John
12-Feb-10 News - Destop PCs are still vulnerable to 'Aurora' Chinese hacker attacks

** 12-Feb-10 News - Destop PCs are still vulnerable to 'Aurora' Chinese hacker attacks
** http://www.generationaldynamics.com/cgi ... 12#e100212



Contents:
"'Operation Aurora' attack goes far beyond Google"
"Protect your computer from the Aurora attack"
"Attack software packages battle each other for control of your computer"
"Germany blocks EU from a bailout of Greece"
"Dubai may be selling of the Queen Elizabeth 2"
"Additional Links"

Re: 12-Feb-10 News - PCs still vulnerable to Chinese 'Aurora'

Posted: Fri Feb 12, 2010 2:43 pm
by browner55
I agree that Germany is/will be reluctant to bail out Greece. However, your logic that the reason has to do with having "a very strong national memory of the hyperinflation that occurred in the early 1920s, when it took a barrel of money to buy a loaf of bread" seems to go against the logic of generational dynamics. In other words, wouldn't the Germans actually NOT have a strong national memory of hyperinflation since many of those who were alive during that period have died?

Re: 12-Feb-10 News - PCs still vulnerable to Chinese 'Aurora'

Posted: Sat Feb 13, 2010 10:49 am
by John
browner55 wrote: > I agree that Germany is/will be reluctant to bail out
> Greece. However, your logic that the reason has to do with having
> "a very strong national memory of the hyperinflation that occurred
> in the early 1920s, when it took a barrel of money to buy a loaf
> of bread" seems to go against the logic of generational
> dynamics. In other words, wouldn't the Germans actually NOT have a
> strong national memory of hyperinflation since many of those who
> were alive during that period have died?
It's not the Generational Dynamic concept that major events in
history are totally forgotten, as if wiped out from memory. After
all, Americans frequently refer to the Revolutionary War, the Civil
War, WW I, WW II, the Vietnam War, etc.

What DOES happen is that the memories are reduced to "sound bytes"
that may or may not represent what actually occurred. Here are some
examples:
  • A lot of people believe that WW II would have occurred without
    Hitler. I like to ask these people why Hitler decided to bomb Pearl
    Harbor. (That's a joke, but for some reason, no one ever laughs.)
  • A lot of people believe that the 1929 stock market crash took
    place over one or two days. (That's actually something that I
    believed for much of my life.) Actually, the stock market crash took
    four years.
  • Even historians seem to know little about WW I. Most people seem
    to think that it was an early version of WW II. Actually, WW I was
    much more similar to the Vietnam War than to WW II.

    ** Politicians commemorate Battle of the Somme, July 1, 1916
    ** http://www.generationaldynamics.com/cgi ... 02#e060702
  • Most people think that Abraham Lincoln started the Civil War to
    abolish slavery. Actually, the war was started by the South for
    economic reasons.
So in the case of the hyperinflation of Germany in the 1920s, Germans
have a collective memory of it, especially the image of barrels full
of money. But few are aware of what was really going on.

** The bubble that broke the world
** http://www.generationaldynamics.com/cgi ... rett071009


John