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(Wired) Interesting Old and busted: The Da Vinci code. New hotness: The Wall Street code   (wired.com) divider line 15
More: Interesting  
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4643 clicks; posted to Geek » on 31 Oct 2011 at 9:12 PM   |  Favorite    |   share:  Share on Twitter share via Email Share on Facebook   more»   |    Get this fabulous T-Shirt and impress the methane out of your friends! shirt it!



15 Comments   (+0 »)
   
 
2011-10-31 09:23:30 PM
Everybody knows Wall Street types don't read.
 
2011-10-31 09:45:11 PM
color me intrigued. i'll look into this a bit more when I've got some free time.
 
2011-10-31 10:01:39 PM
www.scifi-movies.com
 
2011-10-31 10:04:48 PM
"it was given to ME"
"It's killing you"...
 
2011-10-31 10:17:41 PM
in before your mom jokes.
 
2011-10-31 10:43:45 PM
Good move. Open interface, charge for transactions like they've been doing all along but now more people can connect directly. More of an open market and more opportunities to fall victim to high-speed trading algorithms.
 
2011-10-31 11:00:03 PM
"My hypothesis: Within the stock market, there is a pattern as well... Right in front of me... hiding behind the numbers. Always has been."

/I see it's already been referenced.
//Good job.
///20:59 Press return.
 
2011-10-31 11:00:27 PM
This... won't be a good thing.

For the past 20 years they have had security through obscurity. Right now 50,000 black hat hackers are looking for insecurities to steal money through. And they're going to find them.
 
2011-10-31 11:33:45 PM
wildcardjack: This... won't be a good thing.

For the past 20 years they have had security through obscurity. Right now 50,000 black hat hackers are looking for insecurities to steal money through. And they're going to find them.


Yeah, that's why Linux systems are so insecure.
 
2011-10-31 11:49:42 PM
Barakku: wildcardjack: This... won't be a good thing.

For the past 20 years they have had security through obscurity. Right now 50,000 black hat hackers are looking for insecurities to steal money through. And they're going to find them.

Yeah, that's why Linux systems are so insecure.


Then again nobody can really make money with hacked/zombiefied linux computers.
 
2011-11-01 03:34:51 AM
wildcardjack: This... won't be a good thing.

For the past 20 years they have had security through obscurity. Right now 50,000 black hat hackers are looking for insecurities to steal money through. And they're going to find them.


1.bp.blogspot.com
 
2011-11-01 09:24:30 AM
wildcardjack: This... won't be a good thing.

For the past 20 years they have had security through obscurity. Right now 50,000 black hat hackers are looking for insecurities to steal money through. And they're going to find them.


You are late. The black hats have had the code for a while.
 
2011-11-01 10:36:33 AM
wildcardjack: For the past 20 years they have had security through obscurity.

If a lifetime in the black-and-gray sides of computing, from BBS's to Usenet to the web, has taught me anything, it's that security through obscurity does not exist.
 
2011-11-01 12:49:53 PM
Interesting. I sort of doubt the NYSE would server directly to average Joes, right? This will basically just standardize and open up interface for brokerage firms?

On that note, anyone here ever mess with the E*Trade API?
 
2011-11-01 01:28:44 PM
Bonanza Jellybean: [www.scifi-movies.com image 330x501]

Came for this. Now I will listen to the soundtrack while I work this afternoon.
 
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