Saturday, December 30, 2006

Tagged!

Okay, I haven't blogged in a while...not because I haven't wanted to, but because I've been working (you know, that thing that pays the bills) and writing my next book (I've been exchanging chapters with tech editors). In between all that, I've been coding...and if I take this any further, I'm going to have to add a "really bad excuse" label to my blog.

So what exactly is a "blog tag"? To be honest, I have no idea. I first saw mention of it over on MySpace, so that should give you some indication of what it is. Now it's been picked up in the rest of the virtual world, even by nerds ("hey, I resemble that remark!") like us. So, my understanding from Richard is that I'm supposed to document 5 things people may not know about me, and then "tag" five other bloggers. Okay, here goes...

1. I attended the Virginia Military Institute for my undergraduate degree...by accident. I am a Navy brat, and was working toward an appointment to one of the federal service academies, and a high school counselor handed me an application to a small military school in the Shenandoah Valley. In fact, he gave me the last application in his folder, and didn't ask me to make copies of it. That's one of the things about my life that I would NOT change if I could.

2. While attending VMI, I ran marathons my senior year. Yes, looking at me, you'd never know that...according to many fellow Marines, I was "built like a brick sh*t house"...a physique not necessarily associated with nor conducive to marathoning-like activities. I first ran the Marine Corps Marathon in '88, with a finishing time of 2:57. This qualified me for the Boston Marathon, which I signed up for (that is, paid money) and ran...with a finishing time of 3:11. There's more to that story, but unless you attended VMI, it would neither make sense nor be funny. I ran that Marine Corps Marathon again in '89, while I was in The Basic School, and finished in 2:54. I still have all of my finisher medals.

3. In my first tour in the Fleet, I was in Okinawa for a year, stationed with MACS-4. This is the same sort of unit that Lee Harvey Oswald served in. I was a Communications Officer (MOS: 2502). While there, I studied Shorin Ryu, an Okinawan martial art. I'd like to study Akido and Krav Maga.

4. I have a horse, and yes, I ride. Western. Well, not so much "ride" in the traditional sense, like dressage, but more in the sense of "don't dump me off and I'll give you a carrot". I've even done this at a dude ranch, but the carrot thing didn't work.

5. I completed my master's degree at the Naval Postgraduate School, just prior to separating from the military. While there, I wasn't actively engaged in a whole lot (set up a 10Base2 network and connected the detachment to the token ring CAN), so I worked out quite a bit. At one point, I was doing 27 dead-hang, palms-facing-out pullups and ran the 3 mile PFT run in 17 minutes or less. I could bench press 360 lbs unassisted...and yet I was 5 lbs over the weight that the Marine Corps said I should be for my height. So I was placed on weight control, along with the Ho-ho and Twinkie bandits.

Now, on to the tagging...

Jesse Kornblum

Marcus Ranum

Dave Roth

Andreas Schuster

Robert "van" Hensing

Live long and prosper!

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

A month off? I had to check my RSS feed because I thought it was broken. :)

H. Carvey said...

Many times, it's helpful to get comments/questions/suggestions or simply input from the readers.

After all, I get requests pretty regularly, and if they are fairly easy to accomodate, they will usually end up on the DVD for my next book.

So rather than think of it as a hiatus from blogging for a month, think of it as the readers not providing input for a month. ;-)

Anonymous said...

Well... I will try to come up with something of value to ask!

H. Carvey said...

Questions and/or comments are always welcome. If you're concerned about posting, feel free to post anonymously, or email me directly at keydet89 at yahoo dot com, and I can make sure that your input makes it into the blog without reference to you.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for the kind words. My only concern about posting is looking like an idiot, and unfortuantely that can't be stopped!

What is your opinion of the SANS forensic course?

H. Carvey said...

My only concern about posting is looking like an idiot

This is a concern shared by many, particularly LEOs who do not want opposing counsel to find out that they did not know something. However, there are inherent flaws to that logic:

1. You can always post anonymously, or contact me directly.

2. If you do not know something, then not asking the question simply keeps you at square 1. If you were to ask the question, and opposing counsel sees that you did, you can then state that you received an answer and verified the information.

3. Using that same logic (about not posting so that opposing counsel doesn't catch on that you didn't know something), doesn't it stand to reason that none of your testimony would stand up, b/c at one point, prior to all of your training, you did not know anything?

4. Not asking the question does not get you any closer to the answer.

What is your opinion of the SANS forensic course?

I really don't have one. I haven't taken the course, but I do know and respect some of the instructors.

H. Carvey said...

Another thought I had/have been having for several months...

The bad guys communicate with each other. I've heard rumors that some even communicate on gaming networks because they aren't logged. But they communicate. Look at any of the big cases in the news (here, here, and here) and you'll see organizations that share information.

The good guys don't communicate, in part for the reasons/excuses posted in previous comments. Even simple things, like P2P artifacts, are not readily shared. Many lists with closed membership that are dedicated to technical topics are nothing more that social clubs.