CARFAX provides trusted information that helps millions of people buy and sell used cars with more confidence. At CARFAX, we’re at our best when we’re growing, and we believe the same is true of the people who work here. That’s why we invest in the growth of our employees and offer rewarding, creative, fast-paced work, as well as many other opportunities to challenge you.
Why you want to work for Carfax: - Your high energy, entrepreneurial spirit will be appreciated
- You work well in an environment that is chaotic at times
- Team dynamics are important to you
- You are comfortable being yourself at work
- You thoroughly know and have created useful projects in a high-level language such as Java, Groovy, Ruby or Python
- You particularly like technologies whose names start with 'G' ( our main stack involves Groovy, Gradle, Grails and Git)
- You've got a solid knowledge of at least a few of the following: HTML5, CSS3, Javascript/CoffeScript/jQuery, Web Standards, MVC architectures, RESTful/Service Oriented Architectures, Spring, Oracle, Mongo, RabbitMQ, Continuous Integration, TDD.
- We love messing with the latest and greatest technologies and will send you to conferences/training to find out more about the state of the art
- We promote a teaching environment even when it requires us to slow down
- Personal Dev time every Friday afternoon, work on your own projects, many devs here own/run productive side projects
- Agile/XP flows through our veins, we are meta about this probably to a fault. We pair program, use TDD, and we frequently review agile concepts and their application to our work flow
- Comfortable work/life balance, excellent benefits, competitive salary and bonus program
- We like to have FUN at work -- lots of events and team building (zombie paintball, annual paper airplane contest, musical chairs competitions for extra vacation days, theme dinners, SWAG, parties, the list goes on and on...)
We want developers that are comfortable learning new technologies and really diving deep into optimizing our existing stack. If you can be a top notch contributor on our team then please apply at http://jobvite.com/m?3YUpHfwI and we'll get back to you as fast as we can
CARFAX provides trusted information that helps millions of people buy and sell used cars with more confidence. At CARFAX, we’re at our best when we’re growing, and we believe the same is true of the people who work here. That’s why we invest in the growth of our employees and offer rewarding, creative, fast-paced work, as well as many other opportunities to challenge you.
Why you want to work for Carfax:
- Your high energy, entrepreneurial spirit will be appreciated
- You work well in an environment that is chaotic at times
- Team dynamics are important to you
- You are comfortable being yourself at work
- You thoroughly know and have created useful projects in a high-level language such as Java, Groovy, Ruby or Python
- You particularly like technologies whose names start with 'G' ( our main stack involves Groovy, Gradle, Grails and Git)
- You've got a solid knowledge of at least a few of the following: HTML5, CSS3, Javascript/CoffeScript/jQuery, Web Standards, MVC architectures, RESTful/Service Oriented Architectures, Spring, Oracle, Mongo, RabbitMQ, Continuous Integration, TDD.
- We love messing with the latest and greatest technologies and will send you to conferences/training to find out more about the state of the art
- We promote a teaching environment even when it requires us to slow down
- Personal Dev time every Friday afternoon, work on your own projects, many devs here own/run productive side projects
- Agile/XP flows through our veins, we are meta about this probably to a fault. We pair program, use TDD, and we frequently review agile concepts and their application to our work flow
- Comfortable work/life balance, excellent benefits, competitive salary and bonus program
- We like to have FUN at work -- lots of events and team building (zombie paintball, annual paper airplane contest, musical chairs competitions for extra vacation days, theme dinners, SWAG, parties, the list goes on and on...)
We want developers that are comfortable learning new technologies and really diving deep into optimizing our existing stack. If you can be a top notch contributor on our team then please apply at http://jobvite.com/m?3YUpHfwI and we'll get back to you as fast as we can
I strongly disagree. People use the same password on multiple sites all the time. If someone shares a password between Pandora and Gmail or PayPal, for example, you now have access to their email or their money.
Honestly, if you share your PayPal password with other sites, you are already asking for it pretty badly. I'd say the same thing about your Google password, but if you use two-factor authentication is isn't quite so bad (and in that case Pandora isn't a concern).
The reality is though, what Pandora is doing prevents the password from going over the 'net at all, which arguably protects it from being stolen better. For someone to get access to it, they'd need access to your machine, at which point... just how secure do you think your PayPal and Google accounts (assuming no two-factor auth) will be?
The main increased risk factor if you shared your PayPal and Pandora passwords would be that if someone had read-only access to your filesystem, they could still get your PayPal password (which wouldn't otherwise be the case). This would be a potentially big exposure if you have unencrypted backups (though why backup HTML5 storage or browser data in plaintext to an untrusted target if you want security?) or for whatever reason you let other people read your browser profile directory.
you've got a really good point there and on second thought I totally agree with you. I guess I was looking at it from a more "my app"-centric point of view.
I suppose these days, in light of the point you make, if you accept a password from an end-user there is no such thing as a low impact disclosure.
Isn't any default option by definition a choice that has been made for the end user.
I'm really trying to figure out Microsoft's angle on this. I've never once known them to pull a move that didn't in one harebrained way or another promote their products to the exclusion of others. Seeing them act as a watchdog for the consumer has me very confused. Can't believe it but I agree with Microsoft and there's simultaneously a major player in the apache project apparently being puppeted by the interests of large web tracking corporate interests. Welcome to bizarro world.
Embrace DNT, extend it to default apply as though every user selected it, extinguish DNT by having other would-be respecters of the flag not respect it.
last time i finished everything short of writing the program to capture the flag after i realized how to do it. i guess i was tired after basically staying up all weekend glued to the keyboard with the other nuts on irc/campfire. never actually took the last step, never sent stripe my proof and never got my t-shirt. I have regretted my apathy ever since!!!
Can't wait for this one!
Alice is essentially sending plaintext and bob is encoding it via the random resistor configurations he chooses. Since the reciever controls the encryption, as dhx pointed out, you could just act as a man in the middle reading signals from alice on one circuit and forwarding them to bob on another, A & B would never be the wiser.
Didn't read the paper yet but it also seems that without having many many resistors the number of signal states would be pretty low (bob's resistor count squared, assuming alice only has 2 resistors, i.e. a digital signal) making it rather trivial to extrapolate the original signal. Would this essentially rule out using this technique for encrypting a digital signal ?
Why you want to work for Carfax: - Your high energy, entrepreneurial spirit will be appreciated
- You work well in an environment that is chaotic at times
- Team dynamics are important to you
- You are comfortable being yourself at work
- You thoroughly know and have created useful projects in a high-level language such as Java, Groovy, Ruby or Python
- You particularly like technologies whose names start with 'G' ( our main stack involves Groovy, Gradle, Grails and Git)
- You've got a solid knowledge of at least a few of the following: HTML5, CSS3, Javascript/CoffeScript/jQuery, Web Standards, MVC architectures, RESTful/Service Oriented Architectures, Spring, Oracle, Mongo, RabbitMQ, Continuous Integration, TDD.
- We love messing with the latest and greatest technologies and will send you to conferences/training to find out more about the state of the art
- We promote a teaching environment even when it requires us to slow down
- Personal Dev time every Friday afternoon, work on your own projects, many devs here own/run productive side projects
- Agile/XP flows through our veins, we are meta about this probably to a fault. We pair program, use TDD, and we frequently review agile concepts and their application to our work flow
- Comfortable work/life balance, excellent benefits, competitive salary and bonus program
- We like to have FUN at work -- lots of events and team building (zombie paintball, annual paper airplane contest, musical chairs competitions for extra vacation days, theme dinners, SWAG, parties, the list goes on and on...)
We want developers that are comfortable learning new technologies and really diving deep into optimizing our existing stack. If you can be a top notch contributor on our team then please apply at http://jobvite.com/m?3YUpHfwI and we'll get back to you as fast as we can