Published by Foehammer 1 year, 2 months ago
in Foehammer's Anvil.
It seems that I’ve built-up the Anvil to the point that I can hardly think of anything else to add to it, so now I’m busy refining it. In the past 48 hours I made many cleanups to code, the sidebar, links and fonts, as well as adding a nice statistics display and overhauling the Archives.
In fact, if you click on the Archives right now, you can see what I’m writing about for yourself. Older articles should now be much easier to browse through and locate thanks mainly to a terrific plugin called SRG Clean Archives.
Well, actually, the toad has threatened me in an indirect way, but it amounts to a threat to the Anvil and, of course, my Free Speech rights. It’s a foolish move on Jim Sutter’s part, and I’m obviously going to run over the goal line with it.
Here’s the exact body of the email I just had waiting for me in my inbox this morning:
Published by Foehammer 1 year, 11 months ago
in Foehammer's Anvil and Foehammer.
First I’d like to say that I’ve found a grievous error in the Blogger system that went unknown to me for the past several months (I’m embarrassed to admit that, but with so little time across Summer to Fall to devote to the Anvil, things slipped), but as of tonight I believe I have the comments working again! My settings were such that there should have been no need for moderation, only for those wishing to post to be registered with Blogger.
Published by Foehammer 3 years, 4 months ago
in Internet.
I received the following email from Protest Warrior today. Be sure to visit their site and support their efforts, but also go to the site of their new nemesis and make sure you email Jeremy Hammond your thoughts. I did. “Rot in jail, traitor.” Read on:
Using the hacker recruiting ground www.hackthissite.org, Jeremy Hammond put together and led a team of politically motivated “hacktivists” to probe the ProtestWarrior server for months until an exploit was found. When an obscure vulnerability was discovered in the PW server’s newsletter subscription code, they managed to upload malicious files that gave them the ability to execute commands on the server.