Indeed. Per TFA it's "only" $400M in cash and $1.6B in stock.
(and an additional $300M in earn-out based on undefined goals)
I was one of these customers.
I ordered a mSata SSD that via Prime 2-day was scheduled for delivery on xmas eve. I got a notification that day (from Amazon) that UPS was overwhelmed and the package wouldn't be delivered on the "guaranteed" date.
On xmas day I received a (totally unsolicited) $20 gift card credit email from Amazon, that let me know $20 would be waiting in my Amazon account, no code necessary.
On xmas +1 the SSD arrived (and I ordered something else, taking full advantage of the gift card).
Result? At least in this regard, 100% satisfied customer...
actually much easier than you think. $100k is only ten of these stacks (three pictured):
http://www.officialpsds.com/10000-Stacks-PSD63355.html
Assuming all US$100 bills, an average sized briefcase (25" x 18" x 4") could theoretically fit about US$2,400,000. An average attache case (18" x 12" x 4.5") is good for about US$1,000,000.
Calls in mind the scene from Dodgeball where they show a suitcase of $100k, namely:
http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dodgeballmoney2.jpg
(although that's comically undersized for $100k)
Yet Another Information Security Professional, working in a sensitive information startup.
Of course, a lot of these have been in use long before the NSA revelations...
A few of my personal tools and our corporate-used tools:
All OSX shop configured with strict firewall, fileVault, and openVPN,
Browser plugins to block ads (adBlock Plus), scripts/flash (NoScript), popups (Adblock Plus Pop-up Addon), trackers (Ghostery), and enforce HTTPS (HTTPS-Everywhere).
GPG Tools for encrypting individual files / emails - https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgpgtools.org%2F
OTR for secure messaging (use Adium which has OTR support off the shelf) https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fotr.cypherpunks.ca%2F
Silent Circle for encrypted voice and text - https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fsilentcircle.com%2F
Personal VPN for traffic encryption for browsing outside of corporate purposes, e.g. one of these:
https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.bestvpn.com%2Fblog%2F4809%2Fbest-vpn-service-top-10%2F
note that several offer payment methods that are anonymous, e.g. gift cards purchased with cash, i.e. http://www.paygarden.com/
Obligitory Schneier:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/05/nsa-how-to-remain-secure-surveillance
>Oddly, budget and midscale hotel chains are more likely to offer free Wi-Fi, while luxurious hotels — already costing the traveler more — regularly ding us.
Not odd in the slightest -- the majority of said "luxurious" hotel rooms are being consumed by (in no particular order) #1 the price insensitive and #2 business travelers (arguably a great overlap, if not outright subset, of group #1).
Few of either group in covering a hotel bill for a few nights in San Francisco are going to care much if it's $845 or $885 with Internet.
Finally, those in group #2 are much more likely to have elite status with the hotel, which typically (at the higher levels) includes free internet -- making it a "valuable" perk for your brand loyalty...
See that little pipsqueek on the far right? That's what comes out of the "assault rifle" the killer from this story used. It is literally the size of 3 BBs glued together, with a few grams of powder behind it. Cartridge and all, it weighs less then 20 grams.
Yeah, no.
The round used by the primary firearm in this incident was, according to all the reports I've seen, the
For pedantics,
Not that it matters, but I'm a certified firearms instructor (certified to teach pistol, rifle, home firearm safety and personal protection) and strong advocate that the concepts being banded about for "gun control" are absolutely ludicrous at best, but that's not relevant to this specific bit of misinformation.
The reference to ISO compliance here isn't to the ISO9001 quality standard, but the ISO 27001 and ISO 27002 best practices standards for information security.
The difference between reality and unreality is that reality has so little to recommend it. -- Allan Sherman