I'm seeing 128 bit here, I don't know about anyone else.....Each hex digit is a representation of 4 bits (or a nibble). Each two hex digits is a byte, making this number 16 bytes or 128 bits.
"""And how exactly is a hexadecimal an actual number (such as 5)? *rolls yes*Your stupidity knows no bounds Diggers."""I wouldn't normally say this, but since you're calling everyone else on digg stupid:Jesus Christ you're a moron. Just wow.
All this copyright nonsense is getting out of hand. Wasn't there an organization somewhere that owned copyrights to the musical "songs" created by dialing thousands of 7 or 10 digit phone numbers? They sued several companies for using those phone numbers which made prospective clients dial the number, thus playing their copyrighted song, and not paying them royalties.Maybe it's not true, but I remember a professor telling the story in my Science of Sound class.
I was planning on encrypting something using the number '2', and then suing people. Seems somebody beat me to this idea.Anyway, I own:21 66 24 86 36 83 23 54 C8 EF 4A F0 85 EC B4 EC A6 FF F2 C7 D8 F7 28 36 5D 99 63 D2 04 AF 5D BA 67 5E 74 DC 60 44 55 96 51 60 19 0C 51 11 EB 10 And I'm suing Digg for having them on their servers. And to anybody whose data might contain this sequence of 128 bits anywhere: Your ass is mine.
It does plenty more than copyright circumvention. In regards to HD-DVDs, all it does is decrypt the DRM on the disk. And it's only 128 bits. I would imagine that sequence pops up plenty of times throughout many pieces of data all around the world. This site isn't about copyrighting numbers either, you must not have read it. JamesKeenan, you don't know what you're talking about.
horsmanMay 8, 2007
I'm seeing 128 bit here, I don't know about anyone else.....Each hex digit is a representation of 4 bits (or a nibble). Each two hex digits is a byte, making this number 16 bytes or 128 bits.
armandomMay 8, 2007
Because of the sarcastic tone he used when posting the question.
Closed AccountMay 8, 2007
i call 69.
blackadderiiiMay 8, 2007
"""And how exactly is a hexadecimal an actual number (such as 5)? *rolls yes*Your stupidity knows no bounds Diggers."""I wouldn't normally say this, but since you're calling everyone else on digg stupid:Jesus Christ you're a moron. Just wow.
isoscelesMay 8, 2007
All this copyright nonsense is getting out of hand. Wasn't there an organization somewhere that owned copyrights to the musical "songs" created by dialing thousands of 7 or 10 digit phone numbers? They sued several companies for using those phone numbers which made prospective clients dial the number, thus playing their copyrighted song, and not paying them royalties.Maybe it's not true, but I remember a professor telling the story in my Science of Sound class.
toxicredmMay 9, 2007
Hey, mine is .999...*ducks*
missingnoh4xMay 9, 2007
I actually saw a t-shirt with that. Shame I had already purchased a different one earlier.
missingnoh4xMay 9, 2007
I was planning on encrypting something using the number '2', and then suing people. Seems somebody beat me to this idea.Anyway, I own:21 66 24 86 36 83 23 54 C8 EF 4A F0 85 EC B4 EC A6 FF F2 C7 D8 F7 28 36 5D 99 63 D2 04 AF 5D BA 67 5E 74 DC 60 44 55 96 51 60 19 0C 51 11 EB 10 And I'm suing Digg for having them on their servers. And to anybody whose data might contain this sequence of 128 bits anywhere: Your ass is mine.
missingnoh4xMay 10, 2007
It does plenty more than copyright circumvention. In regards to HD-DVDs, all it does is decrypt the DRM on the disk. And it's only 128 bits. I would imagine that sequence pops up plenty of times throughout many pieces of data all around the world. This site isn't about copyrighting numbers either, you must not have read it. JamesKeenan, you don't know what you're talking about.
woxiduMay 14, 2007
@cougarsixThat haiku doesn't look very encrypted